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Published byAmber Wood Modified over 8 years ago
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Emotion
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● A working definition: a reaction or response related to sense perceptions, internal states, thoughts, or beliefs about things or people, real or imagined.
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● It is said there are 6 basic, instinctive, or primary emotions... ● Happiness ● Sadness ● Fear ● Anger ● Surprise ● Disgust
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● To what extent can you control your emotions? Which is the most difficult to control?
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● People across cultures identify these expressions ● Children born deaf and blind show them the same way
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● The James-Lange Theory says emotions are essentially physical in nature, and that body changes precede and cause emotional changes
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● Let's test it: Vividly imagine an extreme emotion with a strong bodily effect. Now try to subtract the bodily feelings... ● What are you left with?
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● With a partner, try to come up with arguments for or against the James-Lange Theory.
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● While emotions are connected to our bodies, they are also affected by our beliefs (unlike animals?)
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● So we have “social emotions” like...
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● So... which ways of knowing are most important when you're deciding whom to marry? ● Language (your friends say she's a good choice) ● Sense perception (looks/voice/smell/etc.) ● Reason (his mom is nice, so he must be, too) ● Emotion (you just feel it)
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● How does Pinker answer the question? (Assuming he answers it.) Agree or disagree?
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● Emotion can be an obstacle to other ways of knowing
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● It can blind us to what our senses tell us, or make us focus on the wrong things
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● It can prevent us from clear and open-minded use of reason
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● It can make us use or be influenced by slanted and emotive language
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● To avoid these problems, classical philosophers called the Stoics sought to avoid all emotion and view the world objectively.
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Marcus Aurelius: ● “If you are distressed by anything external, the pain is not due to the thing itself, but to your estimate of it; and this you have the power to revoke at any moment.”
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● Do you agree with Marcus Aurelius and the Stoics? Why or why not?
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● What role do different ways of knowing play in choosing a college?
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● People with brain damage who lack emotions can lose the ability to make decisions. ● What does this say about reason and emotion?
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● Since you woke up today, how much time have you spent feeling and how much time have you spent thinking? ● What does this suggest about the relationship between reason and emotion?
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● Can you ever feel completely nothing? ● Can you ever think completely nothing?
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● Deep thought: we should differentiate between the rationality of having a particular emotion and the level of rationality possible in the grip of that emotion.
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● “Intuition” can be considered an aspect of emotional knowledge.
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● Our most fundamental knowledge about life, the universe, reason, & perception may ultimately rest on intuition ● If something is a banana, then it is a banana ● My friends are not androids ● Life is not a dream
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● Unlike Empiricism (perception) or Rationalism (reason), the school of thought called Romanticism prioritizes emotional & intuitive knowledge ● “Axioms in philosophy are not axioms until they are proved upon our pulses.” - John Keats
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● If something is intuitively obvious, must everyone agree on it? ● Whose intuitions should we trust?
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● Some intuitions are more subject-specific: ● Do animals have the same moral worth as humans? ● Are you a good judge of character? ● Do great ideas flash into your head and wake you up?
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● Do intuitions meet the criteria of knowledge? ● (Justified true belief)
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