I'm with TheTick on this one.
You're going to need a specifically-designed hoisting winch and an engineer. Your equations are fine if you're doing homework for a high-school physics class. The power requirements are going to be a function of how fast you raise the man-rider and which wrap of cable is on the winch drum, not to mention motor efficiency and motor type since some motors don't handle full load at stall. Further problems with the question involve what you're going to do to lower this contraption. Do you have an adequate resistor bank for dissipating all this energy you have in order to attain a controlled descent? Google the NEMA motor plates on a 1-hp motor. If your winch has a 1-hp motor on it, remembering that 746W=1-hp, you would know that that for 120V line current, according to the equations you're using, you would end up with sizing your circuit for a max draw of 6.2 amps, implying a 10-amp breaker and THIS IS NOT THE ANSWER.
This question is not within the scope of this forum.
Engineering is not the science behind building things. It is the science behind not building things.