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krek1111 [17]
3 years ago
8

Betty is a senior consultant at Delta Consulting. Betty’s colleagues say that she can pick up subtle social cues that indicate o

thers’ needs. Moreover, when people share their problems with Betty, she is good at putting herself in their shoes. Based on the self-assessment, Betty would score highly on which dimension of emotional intelligence?
Social Studies
1 answer:
Inessa [10]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:empathy

Explanation: Empathy is define as a feeling (be it remorse or others) with a person puting his or herself in another person's position or shoe as if you were them, and having those feelings or feeling what those people felt. Its simply is the capability to emotionally feel or understand another person who is experiencing a breakdown, pain, joy e. t. c.

There are cognitive, emotional and compassionate empathy. At times if not most times, if we do see others suffering especially the less privileged and homeless people, we instantly or sometimes be moved and immediately see ourselves in their shoes thinking what it would have been like if it was us and feel remorseful or have sympathy for what the people or person is going through at that moment and more.

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His basic aim was liberty, which he described as "the only object worth the sacrifice of man's life'. For Bolivar liberty did not simply mean freedom from the absolutist state of the eighteenth century, as it did for the Enlightenment, but freedom from a colonial power, to be followed by true independence under a liberal constitution. And with liberty he wanted equality – that is, legal equality – for all men, whatever their class, creed or colour. In principle he was a democrat and he believed that governments should be responsible to the people. 'Only the majority is sovereign', he wrote; 'he who takes the place of the people is a tyrant and his power is usurpation'. But Bolivar was not so idealistic as to imagine that South America was ready for pure democracy, or that the law could annul the inequalities imposed by nature and society. He spent his whole political life developing and modifying his principles, seeking the elusive mean between democracy and authority. In Bolivar the realist and idealist dwelt in uneasy rivalry.

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