Template:Emotional Intelligence/random quote: Difference between revisions
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Created page with "<includeonly> {{#invoke:random|list | sep=newline | limit=1 | {{Quote|text="In a very real sense we have two minds, one that thinks and one that feels. These two fundamentally different ways of knowing interact to construct our mental life."|author=Daniel Goleman|source=''Emotional Intelligence: Why It Can Matter More Than IQ'' (1995)}} | {{Quote|text="Feelings are self-justifying, with a set of perceptions and \"proofs\" all their own."|author=Daniel Goleman|source=..." |
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| {{Quote|text="In a very real sense we have two minds, one that thinks and one that feels. These two fundamentally different ways of knowing interact to construct our mental life."|author=Daniel Goleman|source=''Emotional Intelligence
| {{Quote|text="Feelings are self-justifying, with a set of perceptions and \"proofs\" all their own."|author=Daniel Goleman|source=''Emotional Intelligence
| {{Quote|text="There is perhaps no psychological skill more fundamental than resisting impulse."|author=Daniel Goleman|source=''Emotional Intelligence
| {{Quote|text="For better or worse, intelligence can come to nothing when emotions hold sway."|author=Daniel Goleman|source=''Emotional Intelligence
| {{Quote|text="Fear, in evolution, has a special prominence: perhaps more than any other emotion it is crucial for survival."|author=Daniel Goleman|source=''Emotional Intelligence
| {{Quote|text="Our passions, when well exercised, have wisdom; they guide our thinking, our values, our survival."|author=Daniel Goleman|source=''Emotional Intelligence
| {{Quote|text="The human brain is by no means fully formed at birth. It continues to shape itself through life, with the most intense growth occurring during childhood."|author=Daniel Goleman|source=''Emotional Intelligence
| {{Quote|text="Goal directed self-imposed delay of gratification is perhaps the essence of emotional self-regulation: the ability to deny impulse in the service of a goal, whether it be building a business, solving an algebraic equation, or pursuing the Stanley Cup."|author=Daniel Goleman|source=''Emotional Intelligence
| {{Quote|text="Worries typically follow such lines, a narrative to oneself that jumps from concern to concern and more often than not includes catastrophizing, imagining some terrible tragedy. Worries are almost always expressed in the mind's ear, not its eye - that is, in words, not images - a fact that has significance for controlling worry."|author=Daniel Goleman|source=''Emotional Intelligence
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