Integral (philosophy) Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Also known as the integral-aperspectival stage of consciousness, the term integral has been used in a philosophical sense by several twentieth century philosophers and psychologists that is different from the mathematical sense. They include: Ken Wilber, Aurobindo, Jean Gebser, Don Beck and many others now gathered in the Integral Institute.According to the Integral Institute's website, integral means "inclusive, balanced, comprehensive." In the book Spiral Dynamics, Don Beck and Chris Cowen use the term for a stage of consciousness. This stage sequentially follows the pluralistic, or "green" stage. The essential characteristic of integral thought is that it continues the inclusive nature of the pluralistic mentality, yet extends this inclusiveness to those outside of the pluralistic mentality. In doing so, it is able to accept the ideas of development and hierarchy, which the pluralistic mentality finds difficult. In Integral Psychology, Wilber identifies the integral stage with "...cognition of unity, holism, dynamic dialecticism, or universal integralism..."
