Emotional
Intelligence | Stevehein.com
Beliefs
Towards a new
world belief system
A few more of my beliefs
More
of my beliefs about emotional intelligence
My beliefs about
education
Towards a
New World Belief System
To reduce emotional and physical pain, a new belief system is
needed. The world's dominant belief systems and religions were
all founded by people without knowledge of the laws of evolution
as first proposed by Charles Darwin.* Nor did they have the
benefit of modern psychology or brain research.
Each system attempted to explain what was at that time
unexplainable. With the progress of science, however, we now are
in the position to formulate a much more intelligent and accurate
system of beliefs. While we do not yet have answers to all of our
questions, it seems clear we have enough scientific evidence, as
well as historical data, to move to a higher level of social and
universal enlightenment.
With regard to the intersection of emotions and beliefs, here
are some general problems I see:
- We don't give ourselves or our children the chance to
feel, identify and be guided by our inate, uncorrupted
feelings
- As adults, we often don't know how we feel.
- Throughout life, most people get most of their beliefs
and thoughts from others.
- Our thoughts and beliefs influence our feelings
- Many of our beliefs are false and unhealthy1
Therefore, if these are all true, our feelings often
misguide us. In other words we are led away from what is
natural and healthy for ourselves and the species.
What is needed then is a new belief system. Here are a few
components which might be in this new belief system:
- Harmony
with nature and evolutionary trends
- Recognition of the importance of survival instinct and of
the primacy of the survival of the species over the
survival of the individual.
- Distinction between "rights" and natural needs
(physical, emotional and psychological)
- A system of conflict resolution based not on power, but
on mutual respect for feelings and needs
- A higher respect for instinct, intuition, emotions and
inner intelligence
- A reduced reliance on the supernatural and on drugs and
distractions
- Increased unity
- Increased respect for individual differences and less
attempts at forced equality and conformity
- Elimination of national borders, or a new system of
allowing movement between them
- A more effective system of leadership selection
- A decrease in centralized control and an increase in
personal responsibility
- Increased moral autonomy
- A distribution of power based on intellectual and
emotional intelligence
- A healthier prioritization of values
- An intelligent method of distinguishing functional vs.
dysfunctional beliefs
- Parental training, competency standards and
accountability
Harmony
with nature and evolutionary trends
The more we discover about nature and evolution, the better we
can align ourselves in harmony with fundamental natural laws and
trends. Once we correctly identify these fundamental truths, we
can immediately use them in personal and social decision making
and policy setting.
Here are some of these laws and trends, as I see them:
- Intelligence is favored over physical strength
- Non-violence is favored over violence
- Reason is favored over myth, religion, tradition
- Cooperation is favored over competition
- Moral autonomy, individual conscience and judgment are
favored over obedience
- Internal control and motivation is favored over external
control (ie punishment and rewards)
- Education is favored over punishment
- Prevention is favored over "cures"
- Reality is favored over appearances
- Self-esteem is favored over "other" esteem
Along with the above, it seems that as we evolve our needs
change. It might be fair to say that we evolve both as a species
and individually we have more need for intellectual and emotional
fulfilment and less need for physical fulfillment and sexual
fulfillment.
In particular, it seems that highly evolved people have more
need for
- Self-expression
- Understanding
- Freedom
- Intrinsic satisfaction
- Self-actualization
- Emotional support and connection
- Independence, Self-reliance
- Identification with self
- Variety
- Intellectual Fulfillment
- Emotional Fulfillment
- Creativity
Lesser need for
- Power
- Control
- Security
- Conformity
- Physical connection
- Support from clubs, groups, memberships
- Identification with groups
A Few More of My Beliefs
Here are a few more of my beliefs:
- Emotional intelligence: (1) Is an inate
potential which awaits development, (2) Varies
significantly from individual to individual
- Our emotional needs are vitally important
to our mental health, physical health, academic and
career success, individual happiness, personal
relationships and social harmony.
- Each individual is primarily responsible
for his or her own emotions.
- The human species is by nature primarily
cooperative and empathetic. When we are not, it is only
because we have been hurt, damaged or are in need.
- The long term survival of the human
species depends upon mutual respect for feelings.
- Parents and teachers are critically
important to children's emotional development.
- Our emotions provide us with essential
survival information; therefore, ignoring or invalidating
them is detrimental to our physical and mental health.
- American society is out of balance many
fundamental ways. For example,
Too much Too Little
Competition Cooperation
Judgment Understanding and compassion
Divisive Labeling Unity
Over-valued Under-valued
Intellect Emotion
Entertainment Education
Appearances Reality
Image Sincerity
Success Happiness
Religion Reason
Force, Violence, Fear Non-violence
Development Nature
More of my beliefs about emotional
intelligence
Here is something from an editorial I
wrote:
Personally I believe emotional
intelligence does "exist." And I believe it is
important. Very important. For one thing, I believe it offers
us hope to stop killing each other. I believe it offers hope
for us to stop focusing on the accumulation of wealth and
material things. I believe it offers hope for us to treat
children and teenagers in more emotionally supportive and
understanding ways.
Source
Some of my beliefs about education
- Children have a natural need
and desire to learn, to explore, to experiment, to ask
questions and to discover
- The teacher is there to meet
the child's needs, not the other way around.
- The child's needs, therefore,
are more important than the teacher's.
- The teacher's emotions affect
the student's emotions.
- The student's emotions affect
his ability and desire to learn.
- Many teachers, perhaps the
majority, in traditional schools have significant unmet
needs to feel powerful, important, respected,
appreciated, valued, and in control.
- These unmet needs hinder their
ability to help their students develop personally,
emotionally and intellectually
- The best teachers have the
fewest unmet emotional needs (UEN's). The worst teachers
have the most UEN's.
- Teachers must earn the respect
of their students. They can not demand it.
- Respect, fear and obedience are
often confused. Respect is earned, then given
voluntarily. Fear and obedience are forced.
- Each child is unique
emotionally; all children are not created equal when it
comes to the emotional brain, therefore....
- Each child must be treated
individually, especially with regard to his or her
feelings.
- Individuality should be a
higher goal of education than conformity.
- Emotional invalidation is one of the worst assaults against
individuality.
- Repeated invalidation is
emotional abuse, and it is common in traditional schools.
- Education is ideally more about
learning than teaching. It should not be about obedience
or about creating "good citizens" of the state.
- The highest goal of education
is facilitating happiness, which comes from
self-motivation, self-direction, self-discipline,
self-confidence, and self-esteem.
- Many schools are out of balance
towards grades, test scores, conformity, control,
obedience, rules, threats and punishments.
- One way to reverse this trend
is for parents to support alternative schools, and to
encourage their children to question authority while
focusing on learning.
Also - I believe travel is one of
the best types of education. I encourage all young people to
travel as early in their lives as possible, and as often as
possible.
Footnotes
1 For example, the belief in scarcity, in
material success, in supernatural punishment, original sin,
"evil", in equality, in democracy, in nationism, etc.
2 With the exception of the "Scientologists" which is a rapidly growing group, but which I
consider a dangerous cult that has gone far beyond the more
traditional religions in their use of mind control.