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  • What Is Developmental
    Philosophy?
  • IDP News
    &
    Blog
  • The Developmentalist
    Magazine
  • The Developmental
    Politics Project
  • Articles, Policies
    &
    Practices
    • Articles & Op-Eds
    • Policy Recommendations
    • Virtues Exercise
    • Worldview Questionnaire
    • DepolarizingGPT
  • About the
    Institute
    • About the Institute for Developmental Philosophy
    • Board of Directors
    • Join Steve McIntosh’s Monthly Zoom Group
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Fostering Evolution in Islamic Culture; New Paper by Steve McIntosh

The ongoing rise of radical Islamism in the twenty-first century is a difficult and dire problem, for which cultural evolution is really the only viable permanent solution. But to overcome this [...]

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Join Us for a Panel Discussion at the Integral Center: Cultural Challenges for Emerging Islamic Modernism

On April 23, 2015 the University of Colorado, together with The Institute for Cultural Evolution think tank (ICE), are co-hosting a discussion on the cultural challenges raised by the Islamic [...]

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ICE Privacy Policy


Our Privacy Promise to you 
Since our inception in 2013, ICE has invited our stakeholders to join our email list to receive updates and announcements on our progress as a think tank. Email addresses are securely held by Send-In-Blue email service, which ensures the ability to quickly and permanently unsubscribe from our email list at any time. Character Development Exercise results and Worldview Questionnaire results are stored on our secure server.

We respect your confidentiality 
ICE ensures that your email address, as well as the data you enter on our website, is held in strict confidence. We will only use your information for its intended nonprofit purpose. We do not sell or trade your information to other organizations or individuals.

We protect your information 
ICE takes every reasonable measure to insure that your information is not compromised in any way. Our privacy promise extends online to our Internet website. Online information is transmitted via a secure server using encryption technology. If you choose to send us email, we may retain the contents of your email message, our reply and your email address as part of our ongoing customer service efforts. We reserve the right to contact you after you have contacted us and may send future email to you about ICE. You may unsubscribe to discontinue electronic communication from us at any time.

We keep accurate records 
Upon request in writing we will remove your personal information from our databases, except where legislation or regulation requires our retention of it (for example, charitable giving history tied to income tax receipts.)

If you have any questions about our website or our Privacy Promise, please contact the ICE office by email at info@developmentalphilosophy.org.

Character Development Exercise


What Does “Transcendence” Mean?

“Transcendence” or “the transcendent” generally refers to the people and things that are ultimately more important than yourself or your perceived self-interest. For example, that which is transcendent for you could include: Your family, humanity, your deepest convictions, the environment, God, Oneness, your country, animals, freedom, adventure, art, science, a better world, or anything you consider authentically “higher.” Your personal ideals of transcendence are grounded in the people and things that you’re dedicated to, and might even lay down your life for, if it became necessary. Your ideals of transcendence therefore help define your life’s higher purposes.

The word transcendence is used in this exercise as an umbrella term that is friendly to both spiritual and secular notions of transcendent higher purposes. In other words, you don’t have to be religious to recognize the significance of transcendent ideals. Our attraction to a greater good that lies beyond ourselves—our ceaseless striving to serve something higher and create something better—is a fundamental part of what makes us human.

The connection between your ideals of transcendence, your virtues, and your basic moral obligations—to self, to others, and to the transcendent—is illustrated by the graphic below. The specific virtues shown in this graphic are the 7 fundamental virtues, but the specific 7 virtues you choose in this exercise may differ from these classical 7.

Virtues Obligations

For more on virtues and their relationship with transcendence, see the book Developmental Politics, by this exercise’s author, Steve McIntosh.

Three specific examples of completed Portraits of the Good

Portraits of the Good Example 1

Example 1 of 3

Portraits of the Good Example 2

Example 2 of 3

Portraits of the Good Example 3

Example 3 of 3