Etymology

Potential

Latin potentialis described power that exists but has not yet acted.

Latin · 14th century
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Latin
potentia (power)
Late Latin
potentiālis (possible)
Old French
potenciel
English
potential

The word "potential" entered English in the fourteenth century from Old French potenciel, borrowed from Late Latin potentiālis, meaning possible or powerful. The Latin root was potentia, meaning power, itself from potens, the present participle of posse, to be able.1

Aristotle had drawn the distinction between dynamis (potentiality) and energeia (actuality) in his Metaphysics. A block of marble had the potential to become a statue. The sculptor's work was the actualization.2 When Latin translators rendered Aristotle's Greek into Latin, dynamis became potentia, and the concept embedded itself in European thought.

For centuries, "potential" remained a philosophical and scientific term. In physics, potential energy described stored capacity that could be released under the right conditions. The word carried no obligation. Something with potential might or might not be realized.

The shift into career language happened gradually in the twentieth century. Companies began identifying "high-potential employees" in the 1950s and 1960s, often through personality assessments and managerial evaluations.3 The word acquired a second meaning: not just capacity, but an expectation that the capacity would be fulfilled.

In professional contexts, "potential" became a judgment imposed from outside. To be told you have potential is to be told that someone else has decided what you could become and is waiting for you to become it. The word retains the original sense of latent power, but the social context reverses the direction. Aristotle's potential was neutral: the marble could become many things. Workplace potential is directional: someone has a specific outcome in mind.4

Gallup reported in 2022 that managers identified approximately one in five employees as high-potential talent, while academic research suggested that formal high-potential programs existed in roughly two-thirds of large organizations surveyed.5 The Latin word for power has become a classification system for workers.

4th century BCE
Aristotle distinguished between dynamis (potentiality) and energeia (actuality) in the Metaphysics.
14th century
English borrowed the word from Old French potenciel, rooted in Late Latin potentiālis.
1950s–1960s
Corporations began identifying high-potential employees through formal assessment programs.
1 Douglas Harper, "Potential," Online Etymology Dictionary.
2 Aristotle, Metaphysics, Book IX (Theta).
3 Douglas Ready, Jay Conger, and Linda Hill, "Are You a High Potential?" Harvard Business Review, June 2010.
4 Morten Hansen, Great at Work (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2018).
5 Gallup, State of the American Manager (Washington: Gallup, 2022).
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