Emotional Intelligence: Difference between revisions
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| genre = Nonfiction; Popular psychology
| publisher = Bantam Books
| pub_date = October 1995
| media_type = Print (hardcover, paperback); e-book
| pages = 352
| isbn = 978-0-553-09503-6
| goodreads_rating = 4.05
| goodreads_rating_date =
| website = [https://www.randomhousebooks.com/books/69105/ randomhousebooks.com]
}}
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== Chapter summary ==
''This outline follows the Bantam Books hardcover edition (October 1995; ISBN 978-0-553-09503-6; 352 pp.).''<ref name="OCLC32430189">{{cite web |title=Emotional intelligence |url=https://search.worldcat.org/title/emotional-intelligence/oclc/32430189 |website=WorldCat |publisher=OCLC |access-date=27 October 2025}}</ref><ref name="PRH">{{cite web |title=Emotional Intelligence |url=https://www.randomhousebooks.com/books/69105/ |website=Random House Publishing Group |publisher=Penguin Random House |access-date=27 October 2025}}</ref>
=== I – The Emotional Brain ===
🎯 '''1 – What Are Emotions For?
⚡ '''2 – Anatomy of an Emotional Hijacking.''' At {{Tooltip|New York University}}’s {{Tooltip|Center for Neural Science}} in the early 1990s, {{Tooltip|Joseph LeDoux}} mapped fear learning in rats and traced a quick “low road” from the sensory {{Tooltip|thalamus}} to the {{Tooltip|amygdala}} during tone-and-shock conditioning. That shortcut launches a rough first-draft appraisal—freezing, heart pounding, and a {{Tooltip|hormone}} surge—before the slower, more precise cortical “high road” can finish its analysis. Once tripped, the amygdala recruits the {{Tooltip|hypothalamus}}, pituitary, and {{Tooltip|adrenal glands}} to flood the body with {{Tooltip|adrenaline}} and {{Tooltip|cortisol}}, while the {{Tooltip|locus coeruleus}} sprays {{Tooltip|norepinephrine}} through the brain. The chapter links this cascade to everyday blowups—road rage, sharp words at work, sudden tears—that feel as if something else “took over.” Prior emotional memories sensitize triggers, so present cues that rhyme with past hurts can ignite outsized reactions. The pattern—an “{{Tooltip|amygdala hijack}}”—often ends with remorse after arousal subsides and perspective returns. High arousal weakens prefrontal oversight, narrowing attention and biasing perception toward threat; training attention to early cues and practicing recovery—breathing, reframing, brief time-outs—keeps the reflex from running the show. In this light, emotional intelligence is the know-how to notice a hijack in real time and restore balance between {{Tooltip|limbic urgency}} and {{Tooltip|executive control}}. Integrating the amygdala’s rapid warnings—not obeying them blindly—turns them into data that sharpen judgment rather than distort it.
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=== YouTube videos ===
{{Youtube thumbnail | n6MRsGwyMuQ | Summary of ''Emotional Intelligence''
{{Youtube thumbnail | Y7m9eNoB3NU | Daniel Goleman introduces
=== CapSach articles ===
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