by TWilliam » Wed 30 Jan 2008, 14:33:27
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jlw61', ' ')EQ (emotional quotient) is how you react and THAT is far more important.
BINGO. This touches on something that Wilber talks about, what he refers to as
lines of development, after Howard Gardner's idea of
multiple intelligences. In addition to the line referred to as cognitive development (what one might generally consider IQ), there are also lines of emotional development (EQ), and here's another very important one,
moral development (call it MQ). And as your post implies jlw, people can be at different levels of development in each of these lines (there are others as well, but these are three major ones). Someone can be highly developed in the cognitive line while being very poorly developed in their emotional and/or moral line - the stereotypical "evil mad scientist" being a perfect illustration as such.
One of the interesting little tidbits to come out of research related to multiple intelligences/developmental lines is the observation that while you can have highly intelligent people with low moral capacity (Speer, Goebbels, etc.), it appears the opposite doesn't occur. That is, those with a high level of moral development - a genuinely
wold-centric awareness and compassion for
all of humanity - are always highly intelligent on a cognitive level, and it appears that such cognitive capacity is a prerequisite to advanced moral development.
I would say that the problems we face today are less a result of advanced cognitive intelligence and more a result of the lack of concomitant
moral intelligence. And when you consider the average
dumbing down of the larger population that is occurring, it would appear that the problems are becoming increasingly intractable because without a rise in overall intelligence, there can be no rise in overall morality (genuine morality, not what I term the "idiot morality" of religion).
"It means buckle your seatbelt, Dorothy, because Kansas? Is goin' bye-bye... "