Kagan questions the theorizing about emotions. He writes, for example, about Western language that forces us to artificially categorize an emotion as this or that when emotions are often a blending of several different responses to an event. He is critical of the common categorization of emotion as basic and secondary, with the latter being additive of the elementary emotions. Too often, positive and negative emotions he believes are not objective descriptions but subjective and value-laden expressions that reflect cultural biases. He also sees emotions as broader phenomena than those facial expressions listed by Darwin. All of this, stated at the beginning of his book, is good and he summarizes this healthy criticism by saying that he is not going to define an emotion until he’s spent some time on this subject. He first wants to lead his readers through the maze of thought and debate on this topic until, presumably, the answer about what is and what is not “emotion” becomes clear.
Just a few pages later, though, Kagan starts down a road that very quickly limits the discussion so that the reader’s understanding becomes impinged in two key respects. First, Kagan sees emotions as reactive to “incentive events” that come from the outside. For example, he refers to research findings that show Larry King modulating his voice to fit the status of his guests. If the person is a former President, like Clinton, King matches “his voice to that of his guests. But when King was interacting with individuals who had somewhat less eminence…the guests began to match their voices to his profile.” Well, here, Kagan sees “high status concerns” as an emotion of some sort but he leaves out why King or his guests react that way. In other examples, Kagan refers to “conditions that provoke,” but fails to say why the individual cares enough to be provoked.
Given this externalized source of emotions, it’s no wonder Kagan spends extensive effort to detail all the ways cultures and individualized experiences result in different emotional expression and why any definition of an emotion as an objectified entity is problematic. We are blank slates, formed by culture. As an example, he refers to Presbyterians who feel unworthy when they are not working and says they are reflecting their culture, as opposed to other cultures that don’t see “work” the same way. What Kagan does not dig into is why Presbyterians care about their culture. He just seems to assume that it goes with the territory and needs no further explanation.
Kagan separates human emotion from animal emotions, and this is a second way he delimits his subject matter. He argues that the continuity that Darwin saw between animals and humans was “in error,” largely because of the cognitive capacity of humans that makes our emotions something qualitatively different. So, right here, Kagan removes humans from the animal world and puts us into what Ardrey calls the Illusion of Central Position. We are an exception to the rest of the animal world and all of that. But where our fear, anger, love, and social needs come from, for example, are not explained. We know only that they don’t come from our animal past and we know, according to Kagan, that they have a high degree of cognitive involvement through an appraisal process. And, in fact, Kagan sees human emotions centered in the conscious mind, and this is how they are unique. Because animals lack Mind (in Kagan’s sense), they don’t, and can’t, appraise, so their emotions are necessarily something of an altogether different quality.
A counter view is that all animal life, must “appraise” a stimulus as something to seek, to avoid, or to ignore as not relevant. Without such an appraisal, the animal, very simply, dies. The problem is that Kagan equates “appraisal” with consciousness whereas most appraisals, including a good part of our own, are non-conscious. The body, in effect, has a mind of its own. We pick up signals without involving consciousness because they are “in the air.” Sending and picking them up involves a full suite of “attunement” emotions and it is this animal-like capacity that makes us good at being human.*
When viewed from the perspective of evolutionary psychology, the source of emotions is inside. We have needs (food, sex, merger with group, love, security) and we need to defend against threats and harm. Need (and “anti-need”) is why we care about external “incentive events” (objects we need, objects we don’t need), and why we act and react. Though these basic needs are invariant, some are more or less automatic; others are more subject to cognitive involvement. Some are immediate; others are more about moods. Need and anti-need provide the internal motive force that is missing in Kagan.**
Mind doesn’t motivate per se, but it does tell us how to satisfy our survival needs. Those needs are the same as the rest of life, illustrating the fundamental continuity of all of life. Kagan’s “Mind” complements and supplements this process by telling us how to meet these needs. We may initially fear a stimulus, but mind provides context (information) that alleviates or substantiates that fear. Mind sorts through conflicting emotions and regulates our behavior to satisfy higher-priority needs. Or, we join groups because that’s an evolutionary imperative (Darwin’s tribalism-the group is essential for individual survival), but each group formulates its own codes (mores) about what constitutes being a group member in good standing. This, it seems, is what Kagan is discussing in his description of the wide variation in emotional expression.
*Kagan rightly criticizes those evolutionary biologists who attempt to explain each and every factor of human behavior in terms of survival value. But he goes too far when he charges that the evolutionary quest for “inclusive fitness” is all about competition and self-advancement at the expense of the whole. That’s one half of our evolutionary background. The other half is our social and cooperative nature, supported by an extensive array of social emotions, which leads us to be good group members because group life was essential for our survival. That was Darwin’s observation about our tribal nature and it was Aristotle’s observation way before that (“man” is a social animal), and it can be argued that a good part of humanity has the capacity to extend these cooperative features to non-group members, and even to non-human life.
**Importantly, Kagan does not make a distinction between need that prompts behavior (action, reaction; Schopenhauer’s “pain”) and the satisfaction of need (Schopenhauer’s pleasure states in all of its variation¬-happy, joy, content, relief, etc.) that comes from successful behavior (seeking, defending).