Quiz: Integral Deep Listening and Polycentric Development
1. According to the passage, why is IDL sometimes interpreted as a spiritual or transpersonal practice?
A. Because it promises enlightenment and transcendence
B. Because it involves dreams, perspective-taking, and reflective dialogue
C. Because it teaches meditation and mystical states
D. Because it requires belief in a universal consciousness
2. What is described as the
central purpose
of Integral Deep Listening?
A. Achieving higher states of consciousness
B. Expanding the boundaries of the self
C. Aligning waking identity with the evolving priorities of life
D. Discovering a deeper universal self
3. The term
psychological geocentrism
refers to which assumption?
A. The Earth is the center of the universe
B. Waking identity is the central organizer of experience
C. Spiritual consciousness is the center of development
D. Society determines personal identity
4. According to the passage, many spiritual and transpersonal models attempt to move beyond psychological geocentrism by:
A. Eliminating identity entirely
B. Expanding identity into a larger spiritual or cosmic self
C. Rejecting all forms of psychology
D. Avoiding introspection
5. How does IDL differ from many spiritual models of development?
A. It rejects personal insight
B. It focuses on expanding consciousness faster
C. It encourages listening to multiple perspectives without assuming one center
D. It replaces psychology with philosophy
6. What term does the passage use to describe systems with
multiple interacting centers
?
A. Holocentrism
B. Polycentrism
C. Monocentrism
D. Hypercentrism
7. In a
polycentric system
, stability tends to emerge from:
A. One dominant authority controlling the system
B. Random interactions among participants
C. Balanced relationships among multiple participants
D. The elimination of boundaries
8. According to evolutionary science discussed in the passage, living systems operate under two simultaneous pressures. What are they?
A. Growth and decay
B. Survival/integrity and relational exchange
C. Competition and isolation
D. Independence and hierarchy
9. The concept of
attractor basins
in identity refers to:
A. Places where identity dissolves
B. Repeating patterns of thought and behavior that provide stability
C. Moments of spiritual awakening
D. Emotional catharsis
10. What role does
sublimation
play in IDL?
A. It strengthens existing identity patterns
B. It eliminates conflicting perspectives
C. It allows identity structures to reorganize through exposure to new perspectives
D. It suppresses unconscious impulses
11. According to the passage, stable cooperation across biological and social systems typically depends on:
A. Competition and dominance
B. Boundaries, exchange, reliability, and resonance
C. Hierarchy and control
D. Isolation and independence
12. In IDL, waking identity is understood as:
A. The ultimate center of experience
B. One perspective among many perspectives
C. A temporary illusion that must disappear
D. A spiritual self
13. Ken Wilber’s concept of the
Atman Project
refers to:
A. The search for psychological stability
B. The human effort to rediscover a deeper or ultimate identity
C. A method of dream interpretation
D. The rejection of spiritual development
14. Why does IDL provide a
counterweight
to the Atman Project?
A. It rejects spirituality entirely
B. It discourages personal reflection
C. It repeatedly exposes waking identity to perspectives that do not share its priorities
D. It replaces identity with collective thinking
15. According to the passage, the result of practicing IDL is primarily:
A. Enlightenment
B. Transcendence of identity
C. Greater responsiveness to relational dynamics
D. Elimination of psychological conflict
16. In the IDL model, development is best understood as:
A. Expansion of consciousness
B. Alignment with relational patterns that sustain life
C. Discovery of the true self
D. Escape from personal identity
Answer Key
- B
- C
- B
- B
- C
- B
- C
- B
- B
- C
- B
- B
- B
- C
- C
- B
