ABSTRACT

First published in 2000.  This is Volume 10, No 1 of the International Journal for the Psychology of Religion. One of the most important concepts in the history of psychology is intelligence. Traditionally, intelligence has been thought of as a more or less unitary mental capacity, connoting a general problem-solving ability and skill at abstract reasoning. More recently, a major counter-argument to the idea that intelligence is unitary was published by Howard Gardner (1993) In his view, intelligence is not a unitary construct but instead is multidimensional, comprised of linguistic, musical, logical-mathematical, spatial, bodily-kinesthetic, interpersonal, and intrapersonal facets. Since then, a dialogue has continued about what does and does not constitute an intelligence. This journal is a collection of essays that discuss this question.

chapter |4 pages

Neurobiology of spiritual experience.

The heritability of aspects of reli­

part |2 pages

IS THERE AN OPTIMAL LEVEL OF SPIRITUAL INTELLIGENCE?

part |1 pages

REFERENCES

chapter |7 pages

Description

chapter |10 pages

Spiritual Intelligence or Spiritual Consciousness?

John D. Mayer

chapter |8 pages

Spirituality and Intelligence: Problems and Prospects

Robert A. Emmons