September 2011 Emotional Intelligence The philosopher Plato once said‚ “All learning has an emotional base.” With that being said‚ emotional intelligence is actually a very profound topic. To start‚ emotional intelligence is the ability to perceive‚ control‚ and evaluate emotions. Some researchers suggest that it can be learned and strengthened while others claim it is an inborn characteristic. Emotions help prioritize what we pay attention and react to. There are four subsets to emotional intelligence
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International Journal of Business and Management April‚ 2009 Emotional Intelligence and Employee Performance as an Indicator for Promotion‚ a Study of Automobile Industry in the City of Belgaum‚ Karnataka‚ India Praveen M.Kulkarni (Corresponding author) Karnatak Law Society’s‚ Institute of Management Education & Research Sy. No. 77‚ Adarsh Nagar‚ Hindwadi Belgaum 590011‚ Karnataka State‚ India Tel: 91-831-2405-511 E-mail: praveenmkulkarni@gmail.com B. Janakiram Department of Master of Business
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products of our labor are largely non-physical in nature. They are emotional -- the products that result from the interaction between human beings. Indeed‚ we may work in the exchange of physical products‚ but it is the job of the service laborer to attach emotional value to them. Beyond those required for everyday sustenance‚ the actual material worth of any product is considerably inconsequential compared to its potential emotional value. A decorative chair built overseas and sold at IKEA will probably
Free Emotion Arlie Russell Hochschild
"Emotional Intelligence is a way of recognizing‚ understanding‚ and choosing how we think‚ feel‚ and act. It shapes our interactions with others and our understanding of ourselves. It defines how and what we learn; it allows us to set priorities; it determines the majority of our daily actions. Research suggests it is responsible for as much as 80% of the "success" in our lives." --Freedman et al.‚ Handle With Care: Emotional Intelligence Activity Book Emotional
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worst evils in history happened between 1933 and 1945. The holocaust claimed the lives of nearly 11 million people‚ at least 6 million of those were Jewish. Fortunately‚ one of the survivors was Primo Levi who documented his journey in the book Survival in Auschwitz. There are multiple instances of evil in his book but I will look deeper into chapter 1 and how it relates to the logical problem of evil. Evil in Auschwitz The Fascist Militia captured primo Levi on December 13th 1943 and placed
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discuss the theory which proves that emotions are contagious and can be transferred from person to person. “Emotional contagion is a term psychologists use when emotions “spread” from person to person‚ influencing the moods and behaviors of others. We’ve all felt this shift.” (Polly Campbell Gaiam Life 2014) Campbell the writer for this article on Gaiam life gives a good example of what emotional contagion actually means. In layman’s terms it’s the transferring of feelings to an individual based on others
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The Consortium for Research on Emotional Intelligence in Organizations ( www.eiconsortium.org ) EI Framework 1 The Emotional Competence Framework SOURCES: This generic competence framework distills findings from: MOSAIC competencies for professional and administrative occupations (U.S. Office of Personnel Management); Spencer and Spencer‚ Competence at Work; and top performance and leadership competence studies published in Richard H. Rosier (ed.)‚ The Competency Model Handbook‚ Volumes
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apply knowledge and skills. EI = E-Motion+ Intelligence; WHAT IS EI...??? Originally coined by two US psychologists‚ Peter Salovey and John Mayer‚ emotional Intelligence refers to a learned ability to perceive‚ understand and express our feelings accurately and to control our emotions so that they Work for us‚ not against us. WHY EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE NOW? *Changing nature of work: flatter structures‚ fewer tiers of management‚ greater responsibility. * Increasing complexity: impact of
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Recruiting the best: using Emotional Intelligence as a selection criteria. Pradeepa Wijetunge PhD Librarian University of Peradeniya Peradeniya Sri Lanka E-mail:librarian@pdn.ac.lk Every business person knows a story about a highly intelligent‚ highly skilled executive who was promoted into a leadership position only to fail at the job. And they also know a story about someone with solid-but not extraordinary-intellectual abilities and technical skills who was promoted into a similar position
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The British used to be known as a reserved unemotional nation‚ people who never reveal their inner feelings‚ let alone in public. One interesting phrase “emotional literacy” is taken by a lot of writers in Britain terribly seriously. And there was this great outburst to how princess Di’s death changed the way Britain behaved‚ and the British is becoming an emotionally literate nation. Obviously‚ the British style is no longer the stiff upper lip‚ and that’s gone and it’s probably a good thing. Many
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