Abstract
Influenced by both 17th-century philosophical developments and 21st-century computer science, intelligence today is often defined as “the ability to solve problems.” Drawing on early and medieval Christian thinkers, a theological perspective affords a richer view. For these writers, intellegentia is more than receptive or oriented towards problem-solving. It participates both in the world and in God, by coming to know the world as good not first in how it may serve us but in its kaleidoscopic refraction of the one divine Wisdom, the intellect of God – a refraction that undergirds the latent capacities and potential uses of natural things. Intelligent participation in the world, therefore, is contemplative; the intellegentia passes through the world towards God, its source. In this passage, the diverse echoes of God’s own mind are regathered within the human mind so that the latter becomes ever more an echo of the divine. Theologically understood, this spiritual intelligence entails not only a metaphysics or epistemology of thought, but also a relationship, as the human mind is regathered towards God, known at last not simply as a “highest Good” or first cause and end, but a friend, lover, and, finally, spouse, from whom all things derive their intelligibility as gifts from the triune God who exists by self-gift.