Spiritual Intelligence (SI) is an independent concept from spirituality, a unifying and integrative intelligence that can be trained and developed, allowing people to make use of spirituality to enhance daily interaction and problem solving in a sort of spirituality into action. To comprehensively map and analyze current knowledge on SI and understand its impact on mental health and human interactions, we conducted a scoping review following the Joanna Briggs Institute methodology, searching for 'spiritual intelligence' across PubMedCentral, Scopus, WebOfScience, and PsycInfo. Quantitative studies using validated SI instruments and reproducible methodologies, published up to 1 January 2022, were included. Selected references were independently assessed by two reviewers, with any disagreements resolved by a third reviewer. Data were extracted using a data extraction tool previously developed and piloted. From this search, a total of 69 manuscripts from 67 studies were included. Most studies ( = 48) were conducted in educational ( = 29) and healthcare ( = 19) settings, with the Spiritual Intelligence Self Report Inventory (SISRI-24) emerging as the predominant instrument for assessing SI ( = 39). Analysis revealed several notable correlations with SI: resilience ( = 7), general, mental, and spiritual health ( = 6), emotional intelligence ( = 5), and favorable social behaviors and communication strategies ( = 5). Conversely, negative correlations were observed with burnout and stress ( = 5), as well as depression and anxiety ( = 5). These findings prompt a discussion regarding the integration of the SI concept into a revised definition of health by the World Health Organization and underscore the significance of SI training as a preventative health measure.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2024.2362310 | DOI Listing |
J Educ Health Promot
December 2024
Department of Psychology, Rodhen Branch, Islamic Azad University, Rodhen, Iran.
Background: The aim of this study was to investigate the causal model of spiritual well-being based on the attachment to God and spiritual intelligence, mediated by constancy in long-term goals, belief in a just world, and self-compassion.
Materials And Methods: The current study is of structural equation model correlation designs. The statistical population of the research consisted 4500 of chronic mental patients' families in the year 2022-2023.
Explore (NY)
January 2025
Instituto de Neurociencia Avanzada de Barcelona (INAB), Barcelona, 08039, Spain.
Just as the brain of Albert Einstein is studied in an attempt to understand human intelligence or the bodies of elite athletes are examined to improve muscle strength, the study of people who claim to have spiritual experiences could enrich the investigation of the brain-mind relationship. Although mediumship with deceased people is widely extensively studied in spiritual experiences, we explored a mediumistic experience called "channeling" where the individual connects with a non-corporeal intelligence (NCI) source. To approach this kind of spiritual experience, we considered three hypotheses: the fraud hypothesis (i), the mental pathology hypothesis (ii), and the extrasensory perception hypothesis (iii).
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Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, Makerere University College of Health Sciences, Kampala, Uganda.
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