BRILLIANCY: THE ESSENCE OF INTELLIGENCE
We all value intelligence, and in our modern Western society
it has become valued more than ever before. Yet, intelligence
itself remains a vague and poorly defined concept. We are
most accustomed to measuring intelligence with IQs, which
means in terms of mental functioning. More recently, researchers
have extended the concept to apply to other areas, including
emotional, social, and physical functioning. Brain research,
on the other hand, has focused on connecting intelligence
with the development and operation of neural pathways, coming
up with various theories about this connection.
The present book takes the view that neither the discrimination
of different forms of intelligence nor the understanding
of its physiological basis will add to our understanding
of the nature of intelligence in any fundamental way. We
still do not know what it is and where it comes from, and
we need that clarity and knowledge in order to fully appreciate
intelligence and recognize its full potential for human beings.
This book does not oppose or disagree with any of the orientations
and theories referred to above. Instead it investigates intelligence
by looking in a new and unexpected direction. It inquires
into our direct experience to find the essence of intelligence—what
it is in actuality, and how and why it affects all the forms
of human functioning.
Brilliancy explores the fundamental ground of intelligence,
which turns out to be a quality or characteristic of our
spiritual nature. So this exploration is of a quality of
spiritual presence, the existential substance of our consciousness.
In other words, when we directly experience our individual
consciousness, using spiritual methods and inquiry, we find
it to be a kind of medium or dynamic field, characterized
most importantly by the sense of presence or beingness. We
recognize that most fundamentally we are this conscious
presence. This is an experience and insight that becomes
the heart of spiritual realization and enlightenment, for
it is the recognition of what our true and primordial nature
is.
The interesting thing that the author found, as part of
developing his spiritual teaching called the Diamond Approach,
is that our spiritual nature implicitly possesses many inherent
qualities, like kindness, love, strength, clarity, spaciousness,
and truth. Furthermore, our spiritual nature can appear in
experience as a pure undifferentiated presence and awareness
that implicitly possesses these qualities without differentiation,
or it can manifest as each quality in its differentiated
purity, such as in the presence of love, clarity, peace,
or truth. Another observation is that each quality affects
our consciousness differently, imbuing our mental, emotional
and physical faculties with the characteristics of the particular
quality. When clarity, for instance, manifests in consciousness,
it gives the mind a much greater capacity for objectivity,
discernment and precision in perception, thinking, cognizing
and mental operations in general.
Spiritual presence, which is the ontological ground of our
consciousness, possesses not only timelessness, clarity,
truth, love and the rest of the qualities that are commonly
associated with spirituality, but many other qualities not
often considered spiritual, and one of these is the quality
of intelligence. In other words, through direct inquiry we
can find that intelligence is an inherent characteristic
possessed by our consciousness, a timeless quality of our
spiritual nature. Intelligence is and always has been inherent
to our spiritual nature, and it can arise as a particular
differentiated and knowable quality as well, in the presence
of intelligence. In other words, we can experience our consciousness
as the fundamental “I am,” but we can also experience
it as “I am intelligence.”
This implies that intelligence, as any other of the qualities
of consciousness, may rely on the brain and its mechanisms
for its functioning, but it originates from a different place
than the brain itself. In the Diamond Approach, we recognize
that consciousness is not a result of brain development or
processes, but is emergent within the brain as the brain
reaches a certain complexity. Consciousness is a property
of our spiritual nature, and intelligence is a quality of
this same nature that manifests in our consciousness in one
degree or another. Just as consciousness needs the brain
to operate in our world, so does intelligence. This understanding
means that difficulties in the functioning of the brain can
affect its conductivity of essential intelligence, which
means that our capacity to use intelligence has at least
some dependence on our physical organism.
In this spiritual path, we have found that the presence
of pure consciousness is the fundamental ground of our individual
existence as well as of all existence. It is the deepest
nature of all reality. This recognition leads to the awareness
that intelligence underlies the existence and the development
of the universe. As part of the nature of all of reality,
intelligence has therefore been integral to how the universe
developed and how life evolved. This insight, which is quite
apparent in the direct spiritual experience of the intelligence
in pure consciousness helps us see that the fact that the
universe has an intelligent design is not contrary to the
findings of science, as revealed in the theory of evolution
and in recent cosmological findings. Spiritual experience
shows that there is inherent intelligence to the development
of forms in the universe, and not simply statistical chance.
In other words, the understanding of what intelligence is
and where it originates can aid us in the present discussion
in the culture at large about intelligent design and the
debate between it and evolutionary theory.
The book, especially in its first part, discusses some of
the basic ways we can recognize the experience of essential
intelligence. It discusses how we can know and appreciate
the presence of intelligence as well as experience it immediately
and directly. The first four chapters describe the phenomenological
characteristics of our spiritual nature when we experience
it as the purity of intelligence. We find that its most obvious
characteristic is that it is the actual radiance and brilliance
of who we truly are—our spiritual nature. We find it
to be pure self-existing brilliance. It is not the brilliance
of any color, but simply concentrated brilliance as presence,
hence our reference to essential intelligence as Brilliancy.
It is a presence of consciousness, experienced as a field
of awareness with an exquisite refinement and smoothness,
which corresponds to the visual effect of a blinding brilliant
light that paradoxically does not blind, but enhances our
capacities of consciousness and cognition.
This brilliance of presence is not uncommon in spiritual
awareness but it is not often associated with intelligence.
We begin to recognize brilliant presence as the source of
intelligence when we notice that a luminous individual, who
appears shiny and radiant, also begins to function in a more
intelligent manner. We can see that a person can actually
become brilliant in terms of mental functioning, as well
in other forms of operating.
Brilliancy discusses how essential intelligence
affects our experience of presence, time and timelessness,
as well as its profound influence on our synthetic capacity,
and the penetrating faculty of our mind. By evoking in us
its spiritual ground, the author reveals to us the nature
of intelligence as it imbues each of our faculties with elegance,
economy, rapidness, conciseness, distillation and completeness.
We begin to see the potential of intelligence, as the fundamental
brilliance that can imbue our faculties with exquisite functionality.
And the very completeness of this brilliant spiritual light,
a presence that leaves nothing out, explains not only the
visual brilliance but also the functional brilliance that
is the essence of intelligence.
The second part of the book discusses in some detail how
Brilliancy functions in the process of inner inquiry, how
it can make our inquiry more intelligent and complete by
enhancing its synthetic and penetrating powers. The synthetic
capacity is a reflection of the completeness of the presence
of Brilliancy, and the penetrating power a reflection of
the amazing smoothness and suppleness of its presence.
The third part of the book is taken from work the author
did with a group of students, specifically on the process
of recognizing, liberating and actualizing the essential
presence of intelligence. This section consists of real-life
inquiries where the teacher interacts with the students,
helping them inquire into their experience and limitation
of intelligence, and the issues and conflicts that function
as obstacles to its arising and integration in their consciousness.
It illustrates the particular inquiry that the Diamond Approach
has developed and how it uses intelligence and other qualities
of spiritual nature in its practice. Through the work of
many individuals we see the inner obstacles that stand in
the way of experiencing and integrating this quality. It
becomes clear that our early experiences with our fathers,
so often colored by questions of support and guidance, function
as central in the personal conditioning that can limit our
access to our innate intelligence. These teacher-student
dialogues demonstrate the process and steps of discovering
and experiencing this Brilliancy as well as the ways it affects
our consciousness.
Above all, this book shows how intelligence, when it manifests
fully as Brilliancy, is not a dry mental activity, but the
exercising of our consciousness in a complete way that can
become ecstatic and uplifting of the heart by the spontaneous
expression of our shining presence. Both the direct experience
and the smooth functioning of essential intelligence enchant
the mind with their elegance, aesthetic beauty and exquisiteness.
It is to support this extraordinary potential in human soul—of
knowing the nature of true intelligence—that Brilliancy was
written.