@mastersthesis{Sylaj2020, type = {Bachelor Thesis}, author = {Sylaj, Fisnik}, title = {Emotional Intelligence and Social Intelligence - same or different?}, institution = {BMP - Business Management and Psychology}, pages = {41}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Since the introduction of the concept of Emotional intelligence (EI), there has been affective turbulence in the past decades in the scientific community. The interest in the concept has been growing since the popularization of it in 1995 by Goleman (Goleman, 1995). It has been claimed to be a new way to success, as it was being linked to performance, job satisfaction, many other work-related constructs (Wong \& Law, 2002; Bozionelos \& Singh 2017; Miao et al., 2018; Prentice, 2016) and even health-related benefits (Goleman, 2020). On the other side, the concept of Social Intelligence (SI), which was first introduced and used by Thorndike in 1920, has been around in the scientific community for quite some time as well. It is known for reducing conflict, creating collaborations and mobilizing people towards a common goal (Albrecht, 2005). There has been a perplexing use of them in the field of research. Therefore, the purpose of this thesis is to examine conceptual issues as the similarities and differences between the two constructs and drawing a clear line between the two. A theoretical review has been conducted for independently understanding each concept. Different conceptual models have been analyzed for differences and similarities, in terms of definition, use, skill, problem-solving area, depth of the construct and aim of reasoning. The conceptual analysis shows there are some distinct differences. In addition to that, the results indicate that both concepts are multidimensional, overlapping and interdependent.}, language = {en} }