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Definition of emotion

Friday Mar 12, 2010
  • What is emotion? How does one distinguish an emotion from a thought or physical sensation? I'm writing about this and would love a google researcher to gather as many possible definitions and clarifications from as many possible sources, both scholarly and popular. At least 10, especially including the most authoratitive such as the APA, textbooks, etc.


  • Raphael929-ga, You can get a pretty fast read on a wide variety of dictionary definitions here: http://www.onelook.com/?w=emotion&ls=b I'm particularly fond of the extra tidbits made available through the Webster's online dictionary: http://www.websters-dictionary-online.org/definition/emotion And of course, there's the ever-helpful Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotion Are these the sorts of information you're looking for? If not, please let me know what additional information you need. Thanks, pafalafa-ga


  • Thanks for getting back to me...I'm glad to hear you have the information you need. Here are a few more tidbits which may be useful: This site: http://www.yourdictionary.com/diction5a.html#psychology has a large list of specialty dictionaries that might be worth an explore. For instance, one of the links led me here: ===== http://www.bcp.psych.ualberta.ca/~mike/Pearl_Street/Margin/SOM/Chap16/16.1.html Emotion Minsky views emotions as types of thoughts, types of thoughts that we wrongly credit with lots of stuff that reason does. Emotion is viewed as a product of conflicts among goals. "The question is not whether intelligent machines can have any emotions, but whether machines can be intelligent without any emotions." ===== You might also want to have a look at the Bartleby.com site, with its excellent set of reference documents, including these on 'emotion': http://www.bartleby.com/cgi-bin/texis/webinator/sitesearch?FILTER=&query=emotion&x=16&y=11 All the best with your inquiries. paf search strategy -- used bookmarked sites for references, dictionaries, and speciality dictionaries.


  • This is enough for me - great job, I've got it now, thanks, R


  • Just a thought: Perhaps emotion can be defined as a combination of neurological logical operators and nuerological mental states. For example: Take the human emotion we would call LOVE. Could love, from a truly unromantic point of view be the simple recognition of need fullfillment? Then HATE would be the logical recognition of that which CREATES needs. Those things in our lives that create needs would have the tendancy of making us feel like avoiding them, while the things that fullfill needs would attract us to them. From a biological point of view, it is only important that we do this, and not so important that we understand why we are doing so. The emotional operator creates emotional mental states that MOTIVATE us into action (or inaction, such as the case of DEPRESSION), as needed or deemed appropriate. We can therefore elaborate on other emotions: FEAR becomes a simply biological prioritizer. When faced with what we fear we have the almost uncontrollable urge to pay attention to the fear-source until the percieved threat is dealt with. FRUSTRATION is the logical conclusion that the individual lacks the resources (intelligence, money, etc.) to adequately FIGHT a problem, or "deal with it directly", while at the same time putting emotional value on doing so. PANIC is the logical conclusion that escape, or FLIGHT, from a situation/environment is not possible, or seemingly unlikely, however necessary. DEPRESSION would be a defense mechanism. An individual can only maintain a belief system that is in disagreement with their environment for a definite period of time (usually), although that period will vary from person to person. When a threshold has been overcome in the form of STRESS from this disagreement between ideal reality based on belief system versus the perceived reality of the individual, then the defense mechanism process starts. Depression of the brain is necessary to "rewrite" the neurological connections of the brain, and therefore rewrite the belief system to bring it into accordance with the perceived reality. I could go on (as I have mapped out every human emotion now, with relation to evolutionary development, and referenced to emotional mental state as well), but I think the rest becomes self evident. If you have any questions please feel free to contact me. This is just a hobby/interest of mine, and I found this question by accident. I just thought I would have some fun by answering a little bit. :) Have a nice day.


  • Here's a pretty academic take on the meaning of 'emotion' but it may be more than you had in mind: http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/emotion/ Note that the onelook link I gave you earlier includes several links to medical dictionary definitions of emotion, such as: http://cancerweb.ncl.ac.uk/cgi-bin/omd?emotion Let me know if these are getting closer... paf


  • This is a helpful start - thank you. If possible I'd also like/need some "technical" definitions from textbooks or psychological organizations that show the leading understanding in the field. Thank you.







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