Personal intelligence expressed: A multiple case study of business leaders
Abstract
An individual's intelligences promote success in a wide range of life areas, including at school and at work. A recently proposed intelligence, personal intelligence (PI), is defined as the “capacity to reason about personality and to use personality and personal information to enhance one's thoughts, plans and life experience.” This article employs a multiple case study of well-known business leaders to see if the expressions of PI are really identifiable in people's life expressions. High PI leaders, compared to other leaders, appeared interested in their own and others' personalities, possessed theories of how they were the same as and different from others, used their identities to motivate themselves, and were able to better speak from the heart.
Department
Psychology
Publication Date
11-22-2010
Journal Title
Imagination, Cognition and Personality
Publisher
Sage
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
Document Type
Article
Recommended Citation
Mayer, J. D., Wilson, R., & Hazelwood, M. (2010). Personal intelligence expressed: A multiple case study of business leaders. Imagination, Cognition, and Personality, 30,201-224.