Introduction

Overview, Definitions, & Distinctions

    Our human spirits enable us to say "I am I".
In our spirits, we can become individual persons.
Our spirits give us the capacity to stand beyond ourselves,
to become free, creative, and loving.
Our spirits also enable us to notice our existential anxiety
and to become open to JOY and peace.

    If we have developed our inner spirits,
we know what to do with solitude.
When the hubbub of external events and commitments diminishes,
we find richness within ourselves.
When we become quiet, we come alive in a deep way.

    However, to become more fully persons of spirit
we need not withdraw from the world.
In fact, the dimension of depth we develop while alone
can significantly shape the ways we engage ourselves in the world.
Monks and hermits develop their spirits
by withdrawing from the world entirely—at least temporarily.
And we must agree with them: no solitude, no spirit.
Only when we are quiet, subtle, and deep
do we notice the soft movements of our spirits.

    Some cultures have encouraged the development of the human spirit.
Hindu and Buddhist cultures go so far in the direction of spirituality
that they sometimes neglect the more practical aspects of life.
And, of course, an established tradition of spirituality can distort
what would otherwise be a highly personal form of spirit.

    Our Western culture, however, shows no danger of being too spiritual.
We have our sects that seem to go too far in that direction,
but most of these have their roots in the East.

A. The Life of the Body

    Our culture faces the opposite danger: not being spiritual enough,
stifling the emergence of the deeper dimensions of human life.
We Americans pay first attention to the life of the body.

    Think of the amount of money, time, and attention
we spend on the processes directed toward our physical survival.
Most of us spend literally the best hours of our lives
earning money so we can "keep body and soul together".
Actually we buy more creature comforts than food for our souls.
When we examine our spending, we find that our money goes mostly for
shelter, food, transportation, health-care, and other physical needs.
 

SPIRITUALITY FOR HUMANISTS: SIX CAPACITIES OF OUR HUMAN SPIRITS by JAMES PARK 1


B. The Life of the Heart

    Our physical life is easy to distinguish from our spiritual life,
altho some 'vitalists' use the word "spirit"
to refer to the spark of life that can be found even in animals.
The animal vitality that makes a colt frisky or a monkey playful
is not what is meant by "spirit" in this book.
But when we turn to the life of feeling—what happens in our 'hearts'—
it becomes more difficult to distinguish spirituality from emotion.

    All 4 dimensions (physical, emotional, mental, & spiritual)
overlap and shade into one another; each profoundly affects the others.
Our physical being is the foundation for the three higher dimensions.
And our thinking and feeling are so deeply dependent on each other
that we sometimes cannot disentangle them.
For example, in the experience of jealousy,
how much is thinking that we are being replaced
and how much is our emotional response, automatic and unplanned?
But it is nevertheless helpful to develop careful criteria
for separating these four dimensions of being:
(1) physical, (2) psychological/emotional, (3) mental/intellectual, & (4) spiritual.

    Our physical existence was given by our genes,
which began to form our bodies beginning soon after conception.
Then, beginning on the day we were born,
social conditioning began to shape our psychological dimension
—the complex of emotional responses that makes up our personalities.

    Our emotional striving expresses itself most deeply in our quest for love.
We want to love and be loved, to care and be cared about.

    Romantic love is our culture's most elaborately-developed emotion.
We have been led to believe (the intellectual dimension)
that our romantic feelings arise from 'human nature',
but a closer examination of the emergence of romance shows it to be
a learned response, unleashed on some unsuspecting victim.

    After physical survival and its embellishments,
we spend the next largest amount of time and money trying to feel good.
In many cases, the accumulation of creature comforts
is intended to please others and thereby gain more love.

    Another way to define the psychological dimension of our selves
—our learned responses, emotions we have developed since birth—
is to adopt the model provided by deterministic psychology:
Everything within our psychological dimension of being
can be explained by cause and effect, stimulus and response.
As we shall see later, freedom is a manifestation of our spirits.
But all the feelings we can explain psychologically come from our 'hearts'.
Our emotions arise in our 'hearts' in response to specific situations.
 

SPIRITUALITY FOR HUMANISTS: SIX CAPACITIES OF OUR HUMAN SPIRITS by JAMES PARK 2


C. The Life of the Mind

    Next above the life of the heart ("above" meaning more developed),
we experience the life of the mind.
Here again, we cannot draw any absolute distinctions
but only lay out criteria to clarify how much
of a certain experience is emotional and how much intellectual.

    The life of the mind is characterized by words, human language.
Other portable symbols such as hand signs may replace words,
but the essence of abstract thinking is metaphor,
the ability to transport an insight from one situation to another.
Animal cries and gestures are not transportable;
they always relate to the here and now.
Animals do not talk about the distant past or the distant future:
They have no history to recount
and no plans to communicate to the next generation.
Lacking language, animals have no intellectual life.
But they certainly do respond emotionally to their immediate situations.

    How much time and attention do we give to our mental lives?
The answer to this question varies tremendously from person to person.
The life of the mind consists of thinking, talking, reading, and writing.
As we satisfy our physical needs and our emotional desires,
we can devote more time and energy to our intellectual interests.

D. The Life of the Spirit

    But our spiritual lives are above the three other dimensions:
Spirit is not a biological striving—such as may be found in animals.
Spirit is not a psychological experience—responding to the world.
Spirit is not an intellectual process—dependent on using words.

    No, our spiritual dimension is beyond all these.
It is easier to describe what the human spirit is not than what it is.
We understand very well the life of the human body.
And we usually understand our emotional and intellectual dimensions.
But the life of our spirits often remains in obscurity.
We have no direct way to apply ourselves to enhance our lives of spirit.
But there may be some ways in which we can consciously choose
to orient our beings so we become more sensitive to our spirits,
thereby encouraging this neglected dimension to emerge more fully.

    In this book, we will explore six phenomena of spirit:
(1) self-transcendence, self-criticism, & altruism, (2) freedom,
(3) creativity, (4) love, (5) anxiety & (6) joy.
The more completely we live in these modes,
the more fully we become persons of spirit.

    If we neglect our inwardness, our spirits will not develop
—just as our minds do not develop unless we exercise them by thinking.
How can we expand our spirits and live more deeply?
 

SPIRITUALITY FOR HUMANISTS: SIX CAPACITIES OF OUR HUMAN SPIRITS by JAMES PARK 3


This Introduction
"Overview, Definitions, & Distinctions"
comes from
Spirituality for Humanists:
Six Capacities of Our Human Spirits
by James Park.
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Spirituality for Humanists,
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Several others books on Existential Spirituality
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