The Six Intelligences
The Building Blocks of NeuroPower
The Six Intelligence Centres are the neuro-biological building blocks of human
behaviour and personality. People generally have access to these six key functions
but, through conditioning during their life, they develop a preference and more
habitual use of some functions over the others. The variations in the mix of these
functions give rise to different personality profiles.
Here is a brief overview of the Six Intelligence Centres:
P1 The Personal Value Centre
P1 refers to the personal value centre of the brain, the seat of implicit
procedural memory. This part of the brain is culturally determined and heavily
impacted by the individual’s family of origin and primary care-givers in their
early life.
You have a process for dealing with periods of high transition based on how
your family or carers dealt with it.
C1 The Feeling and Adaptability Centre
C1 is high-energy and witty, creating funny conversationalists, exceptional
lateral thinkers and a bubbly, effervescent attitude. It is the part of the brain
that expresses emotion and links it with happiness, novelty-seeking,
adaptability and agility. It is the fun-loving child within.
In transition, if you don’t have healthy ways to express emotion, you shut
down your ability to be adaptable to change. The more you express emotion,
the more you are able to change.
P2 The Reward Centre
P2 is used by the mind to change the external world to get what you need
internally so you feel satisfied. This is the part of the brain that is the seat of
motivation, drive and ego. It enables you to break old habits and patterns and
go that extra mile to get what we want.
In periods of change, it gives you the energy to go for what we truly desire.
I2 The Empathy & Authenticity Centre
This part of the brain allows you to empathise with others by feeling what
they are feeling. It is experienced as heart-felt joy or deeply felt passion. It is
the seat of authenticity and passion and can be found in the four loves –
charity, eros, affection and friendship.
Often changes in life are triggered when your passion for a task or a person
subsides and you begin to look for new experiences, activities or people.
I1 The Pattern Recognition
Centre I1 is the part of the brain that recognises patterns whether they are
feelings, behaviour, cause and effect or other forms of data and information.
Learning involves being able to interpret data that can be used in aspects of
life. You can live a life where there are patterns you don't want to accept, so
you ignore them.
In transition, you look at the resources you have so you can leverage what
you need to move forward.
C2 The Brain’s Modem
C2 acts as a modem for the brain, downloading new paradigms and
concepts. In the corporate setting, this is designated as a fresh vision. Your
external world reflects your internal paradigm.
In times of change, your outer world does not align with your inner world as
you are already experiencing a shift.
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© NeuroPower 2008–2011 | Site last updated 1 November, 2011