WHAT IS EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE?
John D. Mayer, along with Peter Salovey, is credited with introducing the term, Emotional Intelligence to our vocabularies. On his website, he defines it thus: “Emotional intelligence refers to an ability to recognize the meanings of emotion and their relationships, and to reason and problem-solve on the basis of them. Emotional intelligence is involved in the capacity to perceive emotions, assimilate emotion-related feelings, understand the information of those emotions, and manage them.”
Mayer goes on further to define the concept as “involving the abilities to:
· accurately perceive emotions in oneself and others
· use emotions to facilitate thinking
· understand emotional meanings, and
· manage emotions”
Although John Mayer introduced the term and concept, it is psychologist Daniel Goleman who is credited with popularizing it in his ground breaking books, ‘Working with Emotional Intelligence’ and ‘Emotional Intelligence – Why it can matter more than IQ’. He says on his website, “Like Mayer and Salovey, I used the phrase to synthesize a broad range of scientific findings, drawing together what had been separate strands of research – reviewing not only their theory but a wide variety of other exciting scientific developments, such as the first fruits of the nascent field of affective neuroscience, which explores how emotions are regulated in the brain.”
Susan Dunn MA, compares IQ and EQ thus:
- EQ gets you through life vs. IQ gets you through school
- Appealing to reason and emotions to convince someone vs. Trying to convince someone by facts alone
- Using your emotions as well as your cognitive abilities to function more effectively vs. Relying solely on your cognitive skills
- Knowing how and why vs. Knowing what
- Knowing how to motivate each person vs. Treating everying as if they operated the same way which they don’t
- Managing emotions and using them for good results vs. Being at the mercy of emotions because you don’t understand them or know how to work with them
Steve Hein, author of ‘EQ for Everybody’ draws a difference between Emotional Intelligence and Emotional Quotient as “distinction between a person’s person’s innate potential versus what actually happens to that potential over their lifetime.” He defines EQ as “a relative measure of a person’s healthy or unhealthy development of their innate emotional intelligence.”
He also offers ten suggestions to develop one’s Emotional Intelligence:
FURTHER
http://www.danielgoleman.info/
http://www.unh.edu/emotional_intelligence/
http://www.positivepath.net/ideasCT3.asp