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You are only as smart as your emotions
We still live in a society overly besotted with raw brainpower. Neuroscience suggests we pay more attention to emotional self-awareness.
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We’ve always known that emotion is central to the art of human connection; now we understand that emotion is central to being an effective rational person in the world, says the writer.
PHOTO: PEXELS
David Brooks
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If I were asked to list the major intellectual breakthroughs of the past half-century, I would certainly include the revolution in our understanding of emotion.
For thousands of years, it was common in Western thought to imagine that there was an eternal war between reason and our emotions. In this way of thinking, reason is cool, rational and sophisticated. Emotions are primitive, impulsive, and likely to lead you astray. A wise person uses reason to override and control the primitive passions. A scientist, business executive or any good thinker should try to be objective and emotionally detached, kind of like a walking computer that cautiously weighs evidence and calculates the smartest way forward.

