Like any scripture in the world, Ecclesiastes too contains
contradictions—in one place it says that nothing survives after one dies, but
in places like 12:7 it says “his spirit” survives the death of the physical body.
This leaves us to resort to our own reason! Danah Zohar, who teaches at the
Oxford Strategic Leadership Programme, Oxford University , and psychiatrist Dr
Ian Marshall in their 2001 book, SQ: Connecting With Our Spiritual
Intelligence, observe that “while
computers have IQ and animals can have EQ, it is essentially an SQ that sets
human beings apart“. So, for the `wheel of life' to roll smoothly, all the
spokes of the wheel -IQ, EQ and SQ -have to be equally developed.
The journey from IQ to SQ represents moving from gross to subtle,
finite to infinite, tangible to intangible. SQ has several dimensions:
compassion, wholeness, self-esteem, gratitude, spirit of surrender and service
and the ego. Handling the ego is a critical dimension. When one realizes that
even ego is a just thought, an attachment to a false image what I am not, one
leaves out two costumes—gross (physical body) and subtle (ego), and what
remains is the real “I” which is capable of being aware of itself. If something
could be aware of itself, it could be non-composite. And if it is
non-composite, it will be “minuter than then minutest” in form, hence will not
be subject to physical eye or scientific equipments, but it can only be
discerned, or understood.
Everyone would agree that knowledge exists, and it follows if
knowledge exists, knower too exists—and this knower is immaterial (and some are
even capable of premonition, clairvoyance … something they get without the help
of physical senses)