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Is spirituality a component of wisdom? Study of 1,786 adults using expanded San Diego Wisdom Scale (Jeste-Thomas Wisdom Index)
- Source :
- J Psychiatr Res
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- eScholarship, University of California, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Objective Wisdom has gained increasing interest among researchers as a personality trait relevant to well-being and mental health. We previously reported development of a new 24-item San Diego Wisdom Scale (SD-WISE), with good to excellent psychometric properties, comprised of six subscales: pro-social behaviors, emotional regulation, self-reflection (insight), tolerance for divergent values (acceptance of uncertainty), decisiveness, and social advising. There is controversy about whether spirituality is a marker of wisdom. The present cross-sectional study sought to address that question by developing a new SD-WISE subscale of spirituality and examining its associations with various relevant measures. Methods Data were collected from a national-level sample of 1,786 community-dwelling adults age 20–82 years, as part of an Amazon M-Turk cohort. Participants completed the 24-item SD-WISE along with several subscales of a commonly used Brief Multidimensional Measure of Religiousness/Spirituality, along with validated scales for well-being, resilience, happiness, depression, anxiety, loneliness, and social network. Results Using latent variable models, we developed a Spirituality subscale, which demonstrated acceptable psychometric properties including a unidimensional factor structure and good reliability. Spirituality correlated positively with age and was higher in women than in men. The expanded 28-item, 7-subscale SD-WISE total score (called the Jeste-Thomas Wisdom Index or JTWI) demonstrated acceptable psychometric properties. The Spirituality subscale was positively correlated with good mental health and well-being, and negatively correlated with poor mental health. However, compared to other components of wisdom, the Spirituality factor showed weaker (i.e., small-to-medium vs. medium-to-large) association with the SD-WISE higher-order Wisdom factor (JTWI). Conclusion Similar to other components as well as overall wisdom, spirituality is significantly associated with better mental health and well-being, and may add to the predictive utility of the total wisdom score. Spirituality is, however, a weaker contributor to overall wisdom than components like pro-social behaviors and emotional regulation. Longitudinal studies of larger and more diverse samples are needed to explore mediation effects of these constructs on well-being and health.
- Subjects :
- Male
Happiness
Medical and Health Sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Spirituality
80 and over
media_common
Aged, 80 and over
Psychiatry
Loneliness
Middle Aged
Religion
Psychiatry and Mental health
Mental Health
Health
Anxiety
Female
medicine.symptom
Psychology
Clinical psychology
Adult
Mediation (statistics)
Psychometrics
media_common.quotation_subject
Well-being
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Article
03 medical and health sciences
Young Adult
Clinical Research
Compassion
Behavioral and Social Science
medicine
Personality
Humans
Biological Psychiatry
Aged
Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
Reproducibility of Results
Mental health
030227 psychiatry
Cross-Sectional Studies
Good Health and Well Being
Emotional regulation
Mind and Body
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- J Psychiatr Res
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....bb349e281e53ae043e736b870b46f4ee