Responsibility at Work


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Hardcover
348 pages
ISBN 9780787994754 Published Aug. 2007
Jossey-Bass
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Responsibility at Work
How Leading Professionals Act (or Don't Act) Responsibly

Related Blog Posts
Doing the Right Thing
Posted Oct. 24, 2011 12:29 p.m. by sally-haldorson
In - 800 CEO Read Blog

In 2007, we chose a book called Responsibility at Work as the winner of the Personal Development category for that year's Business Book of the Year Awards. It was the first time I'd been exposed to Howard Gardner's work--he is prolific*, so the book we featured was only a small part of his overall catalog--, and I became quite interested in his Theory of Multiple Intelligences. I don't recall if I've ever taken an official IQ test but I can tell you I wouldn't have done well on it. I'm one of those people with test anxiety which impairs my ability to perform well on tests. It's a bit like an athlete who doesn't compete well, I suppose. Some athletes are able to turn anxiousness into energy while others get distracted by it. That's how I am in any kind of test that needs a right or wrong answer: is it any wonder why I oriented toward the fine arts and Blue Book tests that I could fill out to my heart's content? So naturally I am drawn to other ways of measuring intelligence. Not only for my own ego, but because most people know full well that human performance is complicated despite our desire to place people in pigeon-holes.

Wikipedia, as always, sums the theory up handily for us, describing the Theory of Multiple Intelligences as "a model of intelligence that differentiates intelligence into various specific (primarily sensory) modalities, rather than seeing it as dominated by a single general ability." Gardner proposed the following as meeting his criteria for what is an intelligence.

  • Spatial

  • Linguistic

  • Logical-mathematical

  • Bodily-kinesthetic

  • Musical

  • Interpersonal

  • Intrapersonal

  • Naturalistic

Not everyone agrees with Gardner on this list, or even sees a point to the exercise, but Gardner acknowledges that this is truly just a theory, a theory that over time will prove true and/or valuable.

"I've put forth a candidate set of intelligences that are said to have their own characteristic processes and to be reasonably independent of one another. Over time, the particular intelligences nominated, and their degree of dependence or independence of one another, will be more firmly established." HowardGardner.com/FAQ

There are two new books out this month that posit, if indirectly, additions to the above list of intelligences.

Ethical Intelligence: Five Principles for Untangling Your Toughest Problems at Work and Beyond by Bruce Weinstein, aka "The Ethics Guy" on Bloomberg's Businessweek Online.

Many of us are familiar with Daniel Goleman's popular book, Emotional Intelligence which focused on "the ability to discern how others are feeling, which can be quite different from the ways they present themselves to the world." Here Bruce Weinstein draws a distinction between emotional intelligence and ethical intelligence, saying that it is not only important to process the world and its varied situations emotionally, but, then, when you actually have to do something in response, that requires ethical intelligence. "Emotional intelligence alone won't--and can't--tell you what you ought to do. That's because emotional intelligence is a psychological mattter, but the question "What's the right thing to do?" is an ethical one.

Weinstein's five principles of ethical intelligence are:

  • Do No Harm

  • Make Things Better

  • Respect Others

  • Be Fair

  • Be Loving

And this new book will show you how to identify and improve your Ethical Intelligence and "imbue your life with meaning and enrich all of your relationships" by doing the right thing.

Intuitive Compass: Why the Best Decisions Balance Reason and Instinct by Francis Cholle, an international business consultant with a hefty and diverse vitae, including study in theater and clinical psychology.

In The Intuitive Compass, Cholle introduces us to Intuitive Intelligence, and defends our use of it vigorously. "Intuitive Intelligence is a set of skills I designed that uses intuition to get to the instinctual and nonconscious parts of our minds. It can be learned and developed, but because instinct does not operate in the same way as reason, Intuitive Intelligence requires unusual forms of learning and thinking." The benefit of understanding instinct is then that we are able to alter our decision-making process to find balance and reason.

Cholle begins his book with an Intuitive Compass to help you determine how you make decisions, and then, surprisingly, he leads us into the field of play. There is a lot of good material that extends past play in this book, including how intuition allows agility and creativity, how intuition enables innovation, how you can use your intuitive intelligence; but one of my favorite lines is: "Play open us up to the possibility that we don't need more of anything--time, money, knowledge, and so on--in order to produce more. It is a radical idea, especially in business, where we often hear the argument that budgets are limited and therefore the ability to innovate is limited."

In the case of both books, as well as Gardner's work, the compelling aspect is that the more information we learn about the way we think, the better we get at doing the right thing.

*Perhaps Gardner's top business book is Five Minds for the Future. And for information about his GoodWork Project, visit www.goodworkproject.org.




2007 800-CEO-READ Business Book Awards announced today
Posted Jan. 15, 2008 3:05 a.m. by katie
In Book Awards - 800 CEO Read Blog

The day has finally arrived. After careful consideration, the winners have been determined for our first annual Business Book Awards. Nearly 300 titles were submitted which were then critiqued and reviewed by our editorial staff. A list of 13 titles make up the winners for each category as well as the Best Business Book of 2007.

8cr would like to congratulate all the winners for their hard work and say thank you to all who participated in our first awards program!

Best Business Book of 2007


Made to Stick

Chip Heath and Dan Heath

Category Winners

Advertising/Marketing:
Made to Stick by Chip Heath and Dan Heath, Random House

Biographies/Memoirs:
Bill & Dave by Michael S. Malone, Portfolio

Entrepreneurship/Small Business:
No Man's Land by Doug Tatum, Portfolio

Fables:
The Dream Manager by Matthew Kelly, Hyperion

Finance/Economics:
A Demon of Our Own Design by Richard Bookstaber, Wiley

Globalization:
The Elephant and the Dragon by Robyn Meredith, W.W. Norton

HR/Organizational Development:
One Foot Out the Door by Judith M. Bardwick, PhD., AMACOM

Industry:
The Last Tycoons by William D. Cohan, Doubleday

Innovation/Creativity:
Group Genius by Keith Sawyer, Basic Books

Leadership:
The Secret Language of Leadership by Stephen Denning, Jossey-Bass

New Perspectives:
In Spite of the Gods by Edward Luce, Doubleday

Personal Development:
Responsibility at Work by Howard Gardner, Jossey-Bass

Sales:
The Ultimate Sales Machine by Chet Holmes, Portfolio

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Congratulations! You can find the full list here.