If we do not believe in
any 'spirits' beyond ourselves,
can we still have a spiritual life?
This article will explore six capacities
of inwardness beyond our
physical, emotional-psychological, and intellectual
dimensions of being:
(1) self-transcendence—going beyond ourselves;
(2) freedom—resisting socialization and re-inventing
ourselves;
(3) creativity—bringing something new into
being;
(4) love—reaching out to others as Thou;
(5) anxiety—feeling our underlying Malaise;
and
(6) glimpses of joy and fulfillment
—discovering life beyond angst and
despair.
OUTLINE:
Introduction: how spirit differs from other dimensions of our beings:
1. the physical dimension—given by our genes;
2. the emotional-psychological dimension—learned since birth;
3. the intellectual dimension
—characterized by words, verbal learning;
4. the spiritual dimension—beyond the physical,
emotional, and intellectual dimensions
—characterized by the following 6 capacities.
Six Capacities of Our Human Spirits:
1. Self-Transcendence, Self-Criticism, & Altruism
2. Freedom: Transcending Enculturation and Choosing for Ourselves
3. Creativity: Making Something Genuinely New
4. Love: The I-Thou Encounter, Discovering other Persons of Spirit
5. Existential Anxiety
and other Manifestations of our Existential Predicament
Five differences between simple fear and existential anxiety:(1) description
6. Glimpses of Joy and Fulfillment
In our deepest moments of spirit, we may notice that
depression has been lifted, angst has disappeared.
Spirituality
for Humanists:
Six
Capacities of Our Human Spirits
by James Park
Introduction: Overview, Definitions, & Distinctions
We become more deeply persons
of spirit to the degree
that we express the following six capacities:
self-transcendence, freedom, creativity,
love, anxiety, & joy.
Spirit can be distinguished
from the three
other dimensions of being in the following
ways:
The life of the body is everything
that comes from our genes.
We necessarily devote a significant part
of our energy to surviving.
The life of our 'hearts' includes
all our emotional, psychological,
and personality responses developed since
birth.
The life of the mind depends on words
or other symbols.
Thru years of education, we develop
our capacities to think.
And the life of the human spirit falls
outside everything
that can be explained as physical, emotional,
or intellectual.
1. Living Deeply in a Superficial Culture
The process of developing
our human spirits
may require us to separate ourselves in some
ways
from the on-rushing events of everyday life.
A spiritual or personal journal might
be a meaningful way
for us to focus our spiritual dimension more
carefully.
We could read books by other persons
of spirit.
And perhaps we could exchange
letters
with others,
exploring the ups and downs of our spiritual
lives.
We might also explore our spiritual dynamics
in study groups.
Ultimately, we might find people
who already know something about the life
of the human spirit
to be our spiritual guides.
2. Self-Transcendence, Self-Criticism, & Altruism
Our spirits empower us
to step outside of ourselves,
to transcend any given situation in which
we exist.
And from this perspective, we can even judge
ourselves.
This ability of spirit to criticize who we
have been
enables us to change ourselves for
the better.
Also, because we are not encapsulated in
our egos,
we are able to reach out to others in compassion
and concern.
Altruism may even be observed in children.
3.
Freedom: Transcending Enculturation
and
Choosing for Ourselves
Freedom is our capacity
to rise above all circumstances
in which we find ourselves and to make life-changing
decisions.
Nothing is more characteristic of the human
spirit than freedom.
Even tho powerful socializing forces profoundly
shape our lives,
we always have the freedom to resist conformity
and to define ourselves as persons who will
pursue other purposes
than the goals recommended and reinforced
by our cultures.
The more fully we understand
the forces of enculturation
—which would shape our lives if we did not
transcend them—
the better we will be able to resist
those forces.
The highest use of our personal freedom
is to choose or invent our own purposes
for living.
4. Creativity: Making Something Genuinely New
Frequently our human spirits
dream up something entirely new.
We do not fully understand how such creative
moments emerge.
But when we have flashes of insight and surprising
new ideas,
we know that something important has happened
to us.
And we might wish to capture and package
such moments.
We cannot force
our spirits to be creative,
but we can be ready for creative moments
when they occur.
Being creative in art, writing, scientific
research, etc.
includes being able to recognize creative
flashes
—and how to apply our new insights.
5.
Love: The I-Thou Encounter,
Discovering
Other Persons of Spirit
Love can be a moment in
which two spirits meet.
This happens when we become open to
each other.
We cannot force moments of I-Thou
encounter to happen.
But we can create relationships in which
such moments do occur.
Nevertheless, no matter
how fully we appreciate
moments of meeting others as persons of spirit,
such encounters are fleeting:
Every Thou becomes an It again.
The I-Thou encounter probably
needs to be distinguished
from romantic love, with which it is sometimes
confused.
Romantic love is an emotional response,
well based in emotional programming.
But I-Thou encounter transcends all the illusions
of romance.
We become open to each other as the real
persons we are,
not projecting any false images or trying
to conjure up
the dreamy feelings of 'love' we have learned
from the mass media.
It would be wonderful to
be able to create
communities of persons of spirit,
but this probably cannot happen, because
it is so easy to confuse
spiritual encounter with emotional and psychological
dynamics.
Nevertheless, we can remain open to new encounters
—and treasure the moments of I-Thou meeting
that come our way.
6. The Disclosure
of Existential Anxiety and other
Manifestations of
Our Existential Predicament
Now we turn to the dark
side of the human spirit.
As wonderful as freedom, creativity, and
love are,
they come along with an awareness of anxiety,
depression, and despair.
As we become more free in all dimensions
of our lives,
we will also discover more angst, more
existential meaninglessness.
Existential anxiety differs from simple fear in 5 ways:
1. All fears have specific causes in
the world.
But angst is free-floating and not
connected with specific situations.
2. In fearful situations, we know why
we are afraid.
But angst comes from everywhere and
nowhere.
3. All fears are temporary—lasting only while
the danger is present.
But existential anxiety is permanent
—always waiting within to disclose itself.
4. Each fearful situation threatens only a
limited set of values.
But existential anxiety 'threatens' everything.
5. We have a fighting chance against anything
fearful.
But existential anxiety arises from within
us.
Therefore fight or flight is impossible.
Wherever we go, we take our angst
with us.
7. Glimpses of Joy and Fulfillment
However, angst is
not the last word about human spirit.
As we develop our spirits in the other ways
explored here,
we may have spontaneous moments
in which we break thru to the other side
of despair,
in which we glimpse JOY and fulfillment.
If we are open and receptive
to such moments,
we will attempt to become better attuned
with them,
trying to discover what we were doing right
that allowed existential despair and anxiety
to be lifted.
Peace replaces existential
anxiety when
(1) we stop trying to overcome angst
by our own powers,
(2) we abandon the psychological techniques
appropriate for fears, and
(3) we become open to the gift of peace and
meaning.
Then, over the years of
living in such release,
we learn how to become ever better attuned
with peace.
AUTHOR:
James Park is an independent existential
philosopher
with a deep interest in spirituality.
He has written five books on existential
spirituality,
including Spirituality
for Humanists.
The others will be found in the Existential
Spirituality Bibliography.
URL: http://www.tc.umn.edu/~parkx032/B-XSP.html
The Existential Spirituality Bibliography
also includes reviews of several books by Søren Kierkegaard.
For more information about
James Park see his home page:
An
Existential Philosopher's Museum,
URL: http://www.tc.umn.edu/~parkx032/
This article is based on
a small book of the same name:
Spirituality
for Humanists:
Six
Capacities of Our Human Spirits
by James Park.
The complete text of this 24-page book
is available free of charge on the
internet.
This book is 10 times as long as the article
above.
Simply click the name above or go to the
following URL:
http://www.tc.umn.edu/~parkx032/SPH.html
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