POWER of meanings // MEANINGS of power
  • About
  • Introduction
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      • B >
        • Benefits of understanding power
        • Binary thinking
        • Buddhism
      • C >
        • Choice
      • D >
        • Discovering your power
      • E >
        • Empowerment
      • F >
        • Foucault's "power is everywhere"
        • Free will
      • H >
        • Having power and using power
        • How everybody is powerful
        • How everybody is powerless
      • I >
        • Improving mental abilities
        • In control
        • Inequality
        • Influencing each other
        • Intentionality and power
      • L >
        • Language has power over us
        • Limited resources
      • M >
        • Macropower: discourse
        • Main theories of power
        • "May" power
        • Meanings of power that are not directly related to social power
        • Micropower: ability and influence
        • Mindfulness
        • My synesthetic perception of "power"
      • P >
        • Power and knowledge
        • Power as ability
        • Power as a chess game
        • Power as influence
        • Powerful and powerless
        • "Power" in language
        • Power is not a thing
        • Power of speech
        • Power of mind
        • Power on/off
        • Privilege
      • R >
        • Responsibility, blame and power
      • S >
        • Synonyms of power
      • T >
        • Theory of micro- and macropower
      • W >
        • What is power?
  • Author
    • My process

Power of Mind

PAGE IN PROGRESS
What you see here is a page of my hypertext book POWER of meanings // MEANINGS of power. Initially empty, this page will slowly be filled with thoughts, notes, and quotes. One day, I will use them to write a coherent entry, similar to these completed pages. See this post to better understand my creative process. Thank you for your interest and patience! :)
The most well known power of mind is intelligence. Controversies about intelligence test
multiple intelligences (Gardner)

Social emotional intelligence

emotional regulation

Understanding as power (form of intelligence)
understanding others (empathy; levels of empathy: function - I feel sad when I see someone crying; higher level - trying to understand other if your dislike them)

power to wait; delayed gratification; my 4.5 year old son saying: “I don’t want to wait every day!”

self-awareness
understanding and managing your emotions (emotional regulation)

ability to see that meanings we attach to an object, person, situation are not absolute
​ability to see a situation differently or acknowledge that it can be seen differently

​When we think about mental abilities, we imagine intelligence. However, considerable disagreements exist on what counts as intelligence, as debates about the IQ test reveal. Some note that people have multiple intelligences, while others disagree. Debates have raged about mental abilities related to different spheres of life. Are women better at empathy while men are better at math? Two other well-known mental abilities are logic or memory, none of them simple or straightforward. 

Other mental abilities may not even have specific names. This does not mean that they are less important, but rather that they are less understood or valued. For example, there is no word (in the languages that I know, at least) for an ability to choose a certain interpretation of a situation or an ability to react to circumstances in one way rather than another. However, arguments are made about the importance of these abilities for our well-being (see Mindfulness, Buddhism). 

Same as with physical abilities, one can explore different levels of mental abilities, ranging from a function to a consciously-owned skill that can be improved. For example, we can talk about biases as functions of our brains (Level 1) that are indispensable for being human. We can become aware of these biases 
and of how they can cause problems (Level 2). Finally, although we cannot get rid of our biases, we can train ourselves not to allow them shape all our reactions (Level 3).

Recognizing how intentionality affects our mental abilities allows us to work on improving these abilities. 
Improving our mental abilities can itself become a source of power. However, since mental abilities are so difficult to name and classify, it is not yet clear which ones we can/should improve and to what extent.
Picture
Image credit: A frame in motion
  • About
  • Introduction
  • Browse the book
    • Completed pages
    • All the pages alphabetically >
      • B >
        • Benefits of understanding power
        • Binary thinking
        • Buddhism
      • C >
        • Choice
      • D >
        • Discovering your power
      • E >
        • Empowerment
      • F >
        • Foucault's "power is everywhere"
        • Free will
      • H >
        • Having power and using power
        • How everybody is powerful
        • How everybody is powerless
      • I >
        • Improving mental abilities
        • In control
        • Inequality
        • Influencing each other
        • Intentionality and power
      • L >
        • Language has power over us
        • Limited resources
      • M >
        • Macropower: discourse
        • Main theories of power
        • "May" power
        • Meanings of power that are not directly related to social power
        • Micropower: ability and influence
        • Mindfulness
        • My synesthetic perception of "power"
      • P >
        • Power and knowledge
        • Power as ability
        • Power as a chess game
        • Power as influence
        • Powerful and powerless
        • "Power" in language
        • Power is not a thing
        • Power of speech
        • Power of mind
        • Power on/off
        • Privilege
      • R >
        • Responsibility, blame and power
      • S >
        • Synonyms of power
      • T >
        • Theory of micro- and macropower
      • W >
        • What is power?
  • Author
    • My process