At ChristChurch, Clarendon Park, for the second session in the course, "Mindfulness and Wisdom". This eight-week course is an interfaith opportunity presented by Christians Aware (as part of its Faith Awareness programme) in association with Leicester Serene Reflection Meditation Group.
Our topic
this evening is "Wisdom and Spiritual Intelligence", facilitated by Ian Grayling and Kevin Commons from the Serene Reflection Group.
Direction is set by the question, “Is ‘wisdom’, by its nature, ‘intelligence’?”
To help us consider this question, Ian introduces us to Howard Gardner's concept of Multiple
Intelligence (1999), different types of intelligence, going beyond that which is
identified in standard IQ tests. These different kinds of intelligence are
illustrated in the picture at the top of this entry and are (reading clockwise
in the illustration):
- verbal-linguistic ("word smart") the capacity to use language to express what's on your mind and to understand other people
- logical-mathematical ("logic smart") the ability to understand the underlying principles of some kind of causal system
- musical ("music smart") the capacity to think in music, to hear patterns, recognise them and perhaps manipulate them
- intra-personal (“self smart”) having an understanding of yourself, of knowing who you are, what you can do etc
- inter-personal (“people smart”) the ability to understand other people
- bodily-kinaesthetic (“body smart”) capacity to use your whole, or parts of your, body
- spatial (“picture smart”) the ability to present the spatial world internally in your mind
Other
versions of this illustration contain "naturalistic" (nature smart) and
"existentialist" intelligence. We didn't touch on these in this evening's
session.
In discussing the meaning of "spirit" - in a way that avoids fuzzy religiosity or new-agey feelgood practices - we go to the Latin root of the word: spiritus - that which breathes life or vitality into a system.
This brings to
mind one of my favourite quotes on spirit and spirituality, from Robert Wyatt: "A
French journalist asked if my music was spiritual, and I said, 'Only in the
original sense of spirit meaning breath'."
I also think
of the example that has stood me in good stead over recent years, that of people
being happy to describe themselves as "spiritual, but not religious" in a
variety of settings (I usually draw on the example of Internet dating sites)
without really saying just what that means – except that it’s a good
thing.
Zohar and
Marshall (2003) define "spiritual
intelligence" as "the intelligence with which we can place our actions and
lives in a wider, richer, meaning-giving context; the intelligence with which we
can assess that one course of action or one life-path is more meaningful than
another." In this sense, when we think of "spirit", it directs us to a deeper level
of meaning, toward the import or implications of what is said, thought, written
or read. We talk of the "spirit of the law" being something greater, more
significant and more meaningful than the "letter of the law" – even if it
escapes definition.
In terms
of education, it’s current to consider the spiritual, moral, social, cultural
implication for everything that pupils, students and learners may be studying
(at the most recent meeting of Leicester
SACRE, we had a presentation on how SMSC
is making a comeback in the curriculum).
The table
below helps us understand Zohar and Marshall's concept of "spiritual capital" -
and where it fits with the nature and function of other kinds of
capital.
INTELLIGENCE
|
FUNCTION
|
CAPITAL
|
Rational
|
What I
think
|
Material
|
Emotional
|
What I
feel
|
Social
|
Spiritual
|
What I
am
|
Spiritual
|
Our small group exercise is to come up with three nuggets of wisdom that we'd
give to the world, based on Zohar and Marshall's model. For my part, I'd say
that the world currently revolves around "What I want",
"What I own"
and "What I need" -
and would advocate replacing these functions with those identified in the table
above.
For once,
we're given a little homework. We're asked to reflect on our own faith
perspective (assuming each of us has one) - historically, contemporary,
potentially - and think of examples of spiritual intelligence (or of spiritual
stupidity!)
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