Emotions vs Intuition (Pt 2): Operational Difference
Posted on11 Jul 2013
Tagscognition, Feelings Emotions Intuition - Difference Series, storytelling, negative thinking, negative, intuition, instinct, emotions, decision-making process
Comments4
Emotions drive our energies in a particular direction. Intuition interprets that direction similar to the way thinking interprets facts. Unlike emotions, intuition... Read More
Emotions vs Intuition (Pt 1): Conceptual Difference
Posted on17 Jun 2013
TagsFeelings Emotions Intuition - Difference Series, problem solving, intuition, Food Analogy, emotions, decisions, cognition
Comments2
Intuition helps us acquire knowledge and make decisions via our emotions. Just as facts drive cognitive conclusions, emotions drive intuitive ones. As... Read More
Feelings vs Emotions: The Difference
Posted on30 May 2013
Tagsempathy, sadness, guilt, rationale, motion, happiness, Food Analogy, feelings, pity, emotions, Feelings Emotions Intuition - Difference Series
Comments2
In a previous post, I outlined the differences among feelings, emotions and intuition. Using a food analogy, feelings are ingredients, emotions are... Read More
Identifying Psychopaths in the Workplace
Posted on06 May 2013
Tagspower, Psychopath in Workplace Series, The Bad Sleep Well, rules, relationships, psychopaths, procedure, policies, Personality, objectivity, emotions, control
Comments2
Psychopaths work to amass their power. Emotions are not in the equation. They are immune to those of others, including their own.... Read More
Your Brain, the Final Frontier
Posted on08 Apr 2013
Tagsemotions, behavioral economics, biology, brain, conditionality, context, free will, genetic code, humans, knowledge, management, Management by objective, rational actor theory, Star Trek, technology, The Economist, Brain Mapping Analogy, American Association for the Advancement of Science, Human Genome Project
Comments0
“Space, the final frontier” introduced Star Trek’s original series, but assessments of our human knowledge indicate that the space between our ears... Read More
Groups as Enemies of Individuals
Posted on04 Apr 2013
Tagsbehavior, creativity, organizational culture, emotions, group, honesty, peer pressure, Stanford Prison Experiment, team building, unique, individual, United States Constitution, Lancelot, Round Table
Comments2
We form groups every day, some formal, others informal. The idea that groups are often enemies of individuals comes from two facts:... Read More
Intelligence vs. Wisdom (Pt 2): Magical Difference
Posted on21 Mar 2013
Tagsintuition, awareness, creativity, emotions, experience, information, innate, innovation, intangibles, knowledge, learn, logic, reason, situational awareness, sum of our experiences, tangibles, wisdom, Wisdom's Magical Hierarchy, synergy, additive, Intelligence vs Wisdom Series
Comments2
As I had posted earlier, one cannot be wise without sensitivity to the human condition. This means wisdom has innate, emotional, intangible... Read More
Emotions and Intuition as Foundation of All Decisions
Posted on25 Feb 2013
Tagsrationale, brain, decision-making process, decisions, emotional intelligence, emotions, empathy, Harvard Business Review, intuition, logic, motivation, reason, research methodologies, strategy, technology, The Economist, Foundation & Frame Analogy, Roderick Gilkey, Ricardo Caceda, Clinton Kilts
Comments2
One of the more contrarian perspectives that has helped me appreciate people’s decisions is that emotions and its interpretive big sister, intuition,... Read More
Word Power: Pronouns, Articles, Prepositions, Conjunctions
Word choice tells much about people. James Pennebaker of The University of Texas explores this in his article, “Your Use of Pronouns... Read More