Was love invented by European poets in the middle ages, as C. S. Lewis claimed, or is it part of human nature? Will winning the lottery really make you happy? Is it possible to build robots that have feelings? These are just some of the intriguing questions explored in this new guide to the latest thinking about emotions. Drawing on a wide range of scientific research, from anthropology and psychology to neuroscience and artificial intelligence, Emotion: The Science of Sentiment takes the reader on a fascinating journey into the human heart. Illustrating his points with entertaining examples from fiction, film, and popular culture, Dylan Evans ranges from the evolution of emotions to the nature of love and happiness to the language of feelings, offering readers the most recent thinking on real life topics that touch us all.
Dylan Evans is the founder of Projection Point, the global leader in risk intelligence solutions. He has written several popular science books, including Risk Intelligence: How to Live with Uncertainty (2012), Emotion: The Science of Sentiment (2001) and Placebo: The Belief Effect (2003), and in 2001 he was voted one of the twenty best young writers in Britain by the Independent on Sunday. He received a PhD in Philosophy from the London School of Economics in 2000, and has held academic appointments at King's College London, the University of Bath, the University of the West of England, and University College Cork, and the American University of Beirut.
Emotion is a fairly modern word. Philosophers such as Plato and Hume used defining sets of words to categorize a range of human feels in their early writings. They did their best to describe the complexities of our deepest sentiments, which are incredibly interesting to read. Nowadays, I feel like they would have been confused, baffled, or uninterested in putting such a complex range under a wide umbrella as emotion. I can envision them even scoffing at me with the comparison. This got me thinking. How do you describe emotion? Well, this book takes an interesting look at when the word was first used, how the term butts heads with a number of vastly different states of mind, and even covers those who champion emotional intelligence over the more positive and negative connotations of the term. Hello, Vulcans! ***If you are wondering, there are quite a few Star Trek references. It’s uber fascinating! 🖖
// Basic emotions.
One of my favorite chapters! Is emotion inherited or is it innate? Anthropologists from yesteryear give some prime examples that argue in both directions. Joy and sadness are often described as moods rather than emotions, so how in tarnation do we process that? Easy there, Chris, your displaying aggression. Better not let your emotions get the best of you! But is being upset an emotional state? Is this a subjective feeling or a show of emotion? The philosophical chapter tries to decipher it.
// Cultural emotion.
The first cultural study in the book covers writings around the world. I find it heartwarming to know that no matter where poetry is written, it elicits the same visceral emotional responses from readers around the world. Ah, Leaves of Grass gets me every time. The book also argues that facial expressions are universal signs of emotion and that they are imprinted in the human genome. Some cultures seem to hide their emotions better than others. These ‘poker faces’ do not mean a certain group of people lack emotion; it’s just argued that it takes a little longer for the conscience in some to spark a response to the brain. Fascinating!
Other interesting concepts are covered. Why are fear and disgust instant emotional responses, whereas passion and love are often subdued? Would we know what love is if we were never told about it or read about it? When was the first mention of love in text?
// Are emotions useful?
This was a fascinating chapter. What if we removed fear? Well, we would all not survive as long as we do. What about removing jealousy? It turns out that partners want someone to be a tad bit jealous. This emotion reinforces a bond of companionship. Well, if the said person stays and does not run into someone else’s arms, that is.
The last bit was a lecture on anger. Not all emotions are hunky-dory. The way in which we engage, deal with, and vent anger is an incredibly engaging topic. A philosopher states quite simply that anger is like a clogged plumbing pipe. It must be emptied or vented every so often to give the structure some relief. This is what therapy offers. A way to calm the nerves and flush away the emotion that may get a person to act out or destroy their health internally.
Overall, this book was great! It gave me quite a few other long-form recommendations to check out. When emotions are broken down by anthropologists, they start to make a bit more sense. So the next time you read about a character's emotions “getting the better of them," have a chuckle, because unless it’s explicitly stated, this blanketed term could have over 1,000 connotations. :D
This book was required reading for my Psychology of Emotions class and I thoroughly enjoyed reading and discovering more about emotions. Dylan Evans writing is very accessible and interesting, for example: chapter two is titled, "Why Spock Could Never Have Evolved." I especially enjoyed reading about Paul Ekman's research in with the Fore in New Guinea. My very favorite quote: "Our common emotional heritage binds humanity together, then, in a way that transcends cultural difference. In all places, and at all times, human beings have shared the same basic emotional repertoire."
Drawing from the prevailing literature, Evans summarizes what might be regarded as a prevailing view of emotions (the book’s subtitle is, “The Science of Sentiment”). Rather than casting emotions as solely negative (to be controlled), or positive (the glue that holds the social world together), Evans sees a blend of head (reason) and heart (emotion) that works together as “emotional intelligence,” an optimal emotion state that “involves having just the right amount” along the lines of Aristotle’s golden mean. Evans then seams together nature (universal and biological emotions: joy, distress, anger, fear, surprise and disgust) with nurture (the culturally-specific emotions that “have elaborated on this repertoire, exalting different emotions, downgrading others, and embellishing the common feelings with cultural nuances…”). Evans adds one more category that he calls “higher cognitive emotions,” that “are universal, like basic emotions, but exhibit more cultural variation [and] also take longer to build up.” These he lists as love, guilt, shame, embarrassment, pride, envy and jealousy. Evans also distinguishes emotions that are immediate and short-lived from moods that last longer.
Evans does not tie emotions to motivation that provides the “reason” for behavior. As an alternative perspective, emotions might be seen more broadly as the full suite of evolutionarily-derived motivation structures that support survival and that run across a continuum, from instinctive to disposition, to Evans’ more cognitively-directed emotions, and from immediate expressions to the more general moods that reflect one’s state with the world. These emotion structures function in an integrated way. They contain the ‘reason’ for behavior, which is what we need or don’t need, the specific objects (with memory recognition) that are pertinent to need and threats, and behavior (active seeking, or reactive defending) that links (instinctively, dispositionally, or consciously) relevant objects with the need or threat.*
Even with Evans’ attempt to blend emotion and reason,** he keeps them in separate categories when they should be kept together, functioning as part of the same emotion structure. Ultimately, as far as personal behavior, we act or react to the world based on a needs and threats and ‘reason’ coordinates ends and means to help us solve our needs and to defend against threats. Cognition/consciousness does not replace emotions but overlay them. Evans himself suggests this point in his reference to Joseph LeDoux’s (1996) example of someone startled upon seeing a shadow on the pathway. Basic emotion kicks in first, but this is then followed by a conscious appraisal that brings in other clues that show that the shadow is a stick and not a snake, thereby relaxing the startle reaction. LeDoux suggests the possibility that at least some other emotions operate similarly. In an anger scenario, reason doesn’t replace anger but, rather, informs the body that its emotional well-being depends, for example, on not fighting back or quitting (a job) in a particular instance. Here mind contrasts the immediate with a broader context (or a longer-term and more overriding need) and performs its regulatory, adaptive function that way.
The culture-specific emotions that Evans mentions are variations on an underlying theme. Evolution designs us to be part of a group because this was necessary for survival. The underlying need is to be part of a group, and this comes with a full repertoire of social emotions to make that happen. But the specific content (rules, dress, mores, etc.) varies by group and culture, just as Evans suggests.
As a final note, pleasure (various forms) might be better seen as an emotional state, rather than just another emotion, where energy is quiet because need has been satisfied. Pain, in Schopenhauer’s sense, is also a need state (need to satisfy, need to defend) that is experienced as urge, frustration, fear or anger. But unlike pleasure, this pain state functions also to activate energy that, if of sufficient intensity, results in (motivates) behavior to satisfy or alleviate pain.***
*These emotions also can be experienced inwardly only, without behavior, when (1) they lack sufficient intensity; (2) they are masked so they are felt but not expressed; (3) they are suppressed because of the pain that is felt; or, (4) when they are overridden by broader, more important and longer-term interests or concerns.
** For example, Evans paraphrases Robert Frank: “Not only are there passions within reason, but there are reasons within passion.”
*** This is akin to the utilitarian pleasure and pain notions as overarching emotions, except the utilitarian focus is on the external objects that stimulate pleasure or pain whereas Schopenhauer moves these inside, which is the basis for why the self cares in the first place (why pleasure or pain is experienced vis-à-vis specific stimuli). Seen this way, the self functions as an integrated entity that (1) wants/doesn’t want specific things; (2) “suffers” pain because of what it needs or doesn’t need, which supplies the motive force for overt action/reaction, and (3) experiences pleasure when there’s success. Evans’ account of moods also reflects this broader view of emotion. When one is in a good state, there’s joy, happiness or contentment (needs are being met). When one suffers from a long-standing feeling that needs are not being met, then depression results.
Maybe I'm too much of an anti-positivist to be able to enjoy this book. As an intro to emotions I'd say it's pretty good and written in a funny way with examples from sci-fi and robotics. But I'm having some problems with the fact that Evans constantly refers back to some kind of rather loosely defined primordial time of being when we were some sort of cave men. To me it just isn't relevant to speculate about the evolutionary roots of emotion, what matters is how emotions effect us today.
Some of the research he quotes is also pretty shakey at least in ethical terms. One aparently found that rape victims responded slower to the Stroop test (saying what color the ink of a word is) when the words were related to rape. I mean, WTF they actually found rape victims and subjected them to that!??
So I do prefer more sociological or even psychological accounts of emotion to this, one thing could be to check out Thomas Scheff that is mentioned in the book also.
Về cơ bản thì trong cuốn sách này tác giả đứng về phía cho rằng cảm xúc có vai trò tích cực trong cuộc sống của con người (thay vì quan điểm tiêu cực cho rằng "Cảm xúc là kẻ thù của thành công" chẳng hạn). Cá nhân mình chưa hoàn toàn thuyết phục với những gì tác giả đưa ra, nhưng chúng cũng có những điểm thú vị nhất định.
Cuốn sách chia thành 5 chương, với các nội dung về các chủ đề - Cảm xúc là như nhau ở tất cả mọi người, hay phụ thuộc vào từng điều kiện cụ thể (của từng văn hóa, từng địa phương...) - Vai trò của cảm xúc lý giải theo quan điểm tiến hóa - Các con đường tắt để cải thiện cảm xúc của nhân loại từ trước đến nay - Mối quan hệ giữa cảm xúc và lý trí - Cảm xúc cho các cỗ máy
Dù cuốn sách này không giúp ích nhiều trong việc cải thiện tâm trạng (như mình đã kì vọng), nhưng nếu bạn nào muốn tìm hiểu ngắn gọn về cảm xúc thì đây vẫn là một cuốn nên đọc. Cơ mà cũng vì đây là cuốn dẫn luận rất ngắn, nên các nội dung trong cuốn sách chủ yếu mang tính chất giới thiệu, nếu muốn tìm hiểu kĩ hơi chắc sẽ cần những cuốn sách đồ sộ hơn.
Heel toegankelijke non-fictie over emotie met pertinente vragen over de oorsprong en definitie van het concept emotie. Aandacht voor hedendaagse tendenzen, AI, Gaming, robotica, ethiek. Tegelijk filosofisch qua vraagstelling waarbij je na het lezen van het boek nog een uitgebreide bibliografie en 'verder-lees-lijst' meekrijgt. Boeiend geschreven
كتب مهم لمعرفة كيفية عمل الانفعالات و كيف تؤثر على الذاكرة
فا في الفصل الاول قسمت الكاتبة بين 3 عواطف أحدهما أساسية و هي الفرح ، الحزن ، الغضب ، الاندهاش و بالعادة تكون قصيرة أما الانفعالات العليا مثل الحب ، الذنب ، الانتقام تقعد فترات طويلة و التقاليد و البيئة الاجتماعية تؤثر بها و اخير الانفعالات الخاصة بثقافة معينة مثل حالة تصيب قبيلة معين في افريقيا يتصرف الفرد بها بجنون حيث يبدد أموالها و قد يخرب ممتلكات الآخرين و هولاء القوم متسامحين مع ذالك
الفصل الثاني عن الانفعالات و التطور و كيف الانفعالات مهمة في مسيرتنا التطورية و قالت إن الانفعالات الأساسية سابقة على الانفعالات العليا بسنوات طويلة على ما اتذكر ملايين السنوات يعني تخيل الناس لا يعرفون حب ، كره ، انتقام ، ذنب الا بعد الملايين السنوات قبلها لا يوجد هذا الشي اصلا
الفصل الثالث كيف تكون سعيدا و ما الأشياء الي تخلينا سعدا و لماذا
الفصل الرابع تاثير الانفعالات على الذاكرة ، الحكم على الآخرين ، الإنتباه
و المعلومة التي أثارت اندهاشي أن الإنسان لا يتذكر الحدث كما هو بل العقل يخزن الأشياء بكلمات مفتاحية و ايضا يعتمد على ما انفعالك وقتها و ما انفعالك وقت تذكرها فبتالي لو تعرض مجموعة أشخاص لحدث ما و تم استجوابهم فكل واحد بيطلع كلام مختلف عن الآخر و بيظن أنه هو الصحيح
فصل مهم جدا و الأحب الي
الفصل الخامس هل الآلات بالمستقبل سوف تشعر ؟ و هل بتمتلك مشاعر حقيقية ؟ و ما إضرار و فوائد امتلكها للانفعالات
For the most part, this is a pretty good introduction to the scientific study of emotion, and an intriguing defense of emotional decision-making.
On the other hand, I feel inclined to make a defense of my mentor C. S. Lewis, at whom the author makes an impertinent sideswipe. In discussing whether a new emotion can be 'invented', so to speak, he alleges that Lewis claims (in The Allegory of Love) that 'falling in love' was invented in romances of the high middle ages, then adduces the biblical 'Song of Songs' as evidence against this. This is a serious misrepresentation of what Lewis is saying. If the author had actually read the Allegory, he would realise that it is primarily a very high-level and scholarly analysis of various medieval- and renaissance-era works of romances (The Romance of the Rose, The Canterbury Tales, The Faerie Queen and others). Lewis' claim is that many of our ideas of chivalrous romance stem from this period, not that there was some kind of sea-change in Western psychology.
Anyway, apart from this particular calumny, the book is actually quite good, and I recommend it.
As the title implies, a very short intro to emotions. Talks about emotions in an evolutionary-psychologyish way: conjectures and hypothesis of how they evolved. Discusses some of the more "complicated" social emotions such as jealousy, shame and greed.
A point that gets repeated over and over is that it is meaningless to separate "heart" and "head". Reasons are based in emotions, which are in turn based on (past) reason. If you don't want to do something, the thought of doing that thing anticipates an undesirable outcome, therefore you don't "want to" do it. Trust your emotions.
Will need a more substantial read for those wanting to go deeper.
This book changed the way I look at emotions.. The author did great job explaining the evolutionary roots of emotions like love, anger, sadness, and even jealousy.. and how CRUCIAL they are for the survival of species. Emotions are not extra leftovers of logic and consciousness, they are sometimes logic itself protecting a specie from self-destruction and extinction.. 5 stars without hesitation!
Very rarely you find a book covers the subject matter and is easy to read. Wonderful introduction to Emotions and its science. Thoroughly enjoyed reading it
"التعبيرات الانفعالية ليست مثل اللغة في اختلافها من ثقافة إلى أخرى؛ إنما هي سمة فطرية أقرب ما تكون إلى التنفّس الذي يُعَد جزءًا لا ينفكَّ عن الطبيعة البشرية."
الكتاب يقدم نظرة شاملة، سريعة، وموجزه حول ماهية الانفعال الإنساني: كيف ينشأ، وما علاقته بالعقل، ولماذا نختبر مشاعر كالخوف أو الغضب أو الفرح. يناقش المؤلف النظريات الفلسفية والعلمية التي حاولت تفسير الانفعال، مستندًا بشكل رئيس إلى نظرية داروين في التطور لفهم جذوره البيولوجية. كما يتطرق إلى دور الانفعال في السلوك الإنساني، واتخاذ القرار، والعلاقات الاجتماعية، محاولًا الربط بين ما هو جسدي وما هو نفسي في التجربة الشعورية.
كانت تجربة القراءة هنا مثيرة للاهتمام في بعض الفصول رغم ملاحظتي عدم موضوعية المؤلف واستناده التام إلى أبحاث نظرية داروين للتطور، ولم يستعرض أي نظريات أخرى مغايرة قد تقدم إجابات على تساؤلاته. ربما لو لم يكن عقله ضيقاً واطّلع على كتب الأديان السماوية لوجد بعض الإجابات التي كان يبحث عنها.
قد يشفع للكتاب أسلوبه المتوازن. فطرحه للأمثلة كان أكاديمياً، وعرضه لفكرته كان سلسا وسهل الفهم، وبالتالي سهُلت المطالعة. ومع ذلك رأيت أن الموضوع أبسط بكثير من ذلك، إذ أن الفلاسفة يميلون دائما لتعقيد المواضيع البسيطة.
أكثر فكرة راودتني أثناء القراءة هي إدراك عظمة الخالق سبحانه وقوله تعالى: [لقد خلقنا الإنسان في أحسن تقويم].
وفي النهاية، أرى أنه مفيد للقارئ العام المهتم بالموضوع، لكنه لا يبهر أو يضيف معرفة جديدة بشكل جوهري.
تحذير: بما إن الكتاب مبني على نظرية التطور، فبالتأكيد سيكون هناك بعض التعديات.
a rather good book. Emotion is an understudied subject in cognitive science. This short introduction, though not comprehensive as it should not be, it creates a good priming.
The first two chapters were enjoyable to read : Evans describes what is an emotion, he talks about how emotions evolved throughout history and how they helped us to survive. This part was quite enjoyable to read.
The last chapters just made me feel less and less interested in finishing the book. Instead of focusing on humans' emotions, the author writes a lot about robots' ones ... Which is ... unpredicted.
In one of the last chapter, Evans makes a parallel between animal rights and robot rights ... I mean ... This makes no sense.
"Just as some people are prepared to use violent means to defend animal rights, so some people might join force with the oppressed robots to free them from their slavery."
Overall, the first two chapters are 3/5 (even if I am doubtful regarded to the ethical characteristic of some of the studies quoted ...) and the last three are 2/5. I would have appreciated a more deeply focus on human emotions, instead of focusing on the hypothetic robots' capacity to feel emotions in the future.
Was love invented by European poets in the Middle Ages or is it part of human nature? Will winning the lottery really make you happy? Is it possible to build robots that have feelings? These are just some of the intriguing questions explored in this guide to the latest thinking about the emotions. Drawing on a wide range of scientific research, from anthropology and psychology to neuroscience and artificial intelligence, Emotion: The Science of Sentiment takes the reader on a fascinating journey into the human heart.
I appreciate the lucidity of the language used for it makes research in the area sound simpler to common masses. But I expected the inclusion of more research studies happening in the area. I liked the way the author has addressed the issue of how emotions affect our reasoning and vice versa. I too believe that it is high time we do away with the belief that emotions and logic are two mutually exclusive processes of the mind.
Kinda unexpected how comforting it is for me that emotion is such a natural, biological, material entity derived from evolution. I feel validated haha. Rekomen!
Although I’ve already read several books on emotions, I still found this one worthwhile, particularly for its exploration of the functions of emotions.
The author, Dylan Evans, begins the book by introducing a system developed by philosopher Paul Griffiths, which categorizes emotions into three groups: 1. Basic emotions – joy, distress, anger, fear, surprise, and disgust. 2. Higher cognitive emotions – such as love, guilt, pride, and jealousy. 3. Culturally specific emotions.
This framework not only reconciles the academic debate between those who see emotions as universal (e.g., Paul Ekman) and those who view them as culturally specific (e.g., Lisa Feldman Barrett) but also provides a practical way to understand why emotions are essential to human functioning.
In the book's second edition, Evans includes a new chapter on machines' abilities to detect and simulate emotions. To explain why some scientists advocate for creating emotions in machines, he introduces Herbert Simon’s theory, which posits that emotions serve as "interception recognition," helping to solve the complex problem of action selection. Simon goes as far as suggesting that emotions are merely interception recognition. I was surprised this theory wasn’t introduced earlier in the book, as it offers an excellent explanation for the role of basic emotions, even if it falls short in accounting for higher cognitive and culturally specific emotions.
For higher cognitive emotions, Evans discusses economist Robert H. Frank’s theory. Frank argues that emotions such as love and guilt help resolve various commitment problems. For instance, guilt earns trust by persuading others you are less likely to cheat, while love convinces others of one’s fidelity. Frank also notes that humans have evolved physical signals, such as blushing and a racing heart, to reliably communicate these emotions.
The author also examines emotions through Gigerenzer’s concept of ecological rationality. He critiques the narrow rationality framework used by logicians and economists, which evaluates the rationality of choices based on preferences without questioning the preferences themselves. Instead, it is perfectly sensible to discuss whether certain preferences are rational. For example, "it is reasonable to want to be liked by a few friends but unreasonable to want to be adored by everyone in the world". By shaping what we value and pursue, emotions make us rational. In a social species like humans, emotions are doubly useful, as we can turn to the emotions of both ourselves and others for guidance. As Pascal famously said, "The heart has its reasons."
The book also covers topics such as the universality of emotions, the evolutionary origin of emotions, tools invented by humans to induce emotions, how emotion guides moral behavior, and emotions' effects on attention, memory, and logical reasoning. While these sections do not stand out, they are still interesting to read.
Overall, this book is a concise and insightful introduction to the study of emotions.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
The second of this series I've dipped into was not as cohesive or involving as Education: A Very Short Introduction, but it was an informative overview all the same, told with a subtle sense of humor ("Since the dawn of humanity, people have regularly come together to dance and take drugs." All right!)
Strangely, I had never heard of the research of Paul Ekman, who demonstrates convincingly the universality of emotions, at least basic ones. This discussion in chapter 1 alone makes the book worth its time.
Chapters 3 and 4 show the author at his best, with entertaining romps through manipulations to our emotions -- try a rave, seems the conclusion -- to how emotion can influence thought, or even somehow constitute it. I'm sure there is a more exacting term for what chapter 4 is doing but I'll keep it in mind for future reading.
Chapter 5 is on artificial intelligence having emotions. The book was written twenty years ago, but there doesn't seem much more interesting to say about emotion and AI. I'll evaluate it when I encounter it, I guess.
Not the best. Very interesting but it just seemed strange to me that a PhD in Economics wrote a thesis centered around a psychological topic, which would be fine since there are overlaps between the two disciplines, but he stuck almost entirely on evolutionary psychology (even though emotions tend to be studied often by social and developmental psych) and he made almost no arguments from economic perspectives. Doing this made the short book overly reductive and very boring, at least to me. A further consequence of the expertise mismatch lead the author to make many conclusions that just were not supported in the book and may not have been supported at the time (this book is quite outdated having been published in 2001).
This is likely just splitting hairs but he also called Paul Ekman “the anthropologist” when he is a psychologist that spent so much time studying emotions that he was one of the main consultants on the movies Inside Out and Inside Out 2, among so many other things.
I do think it’s a very good summary of one way of looking at emotions but the errors in the conclusions and sources was just too glaring for me.
Evans, writing from an evolutionary psychology perspective, discusses the fascinating phenomenon of emotion, covering such topics as the difference between basic (anger, sadness, etc.) and higher cognitive emotions (shame, guilt, jealousy, etc.), the use of emotions, the mood of happiness, the role emotion play sin memory, critical thinking, the use of empathy as well as the question of whether robots can have emotion. Regarding robots, he argues that, since it is widely recognized that emotions are a bodily phenomenon, even if robots could have emotions that would be the same as ours since they have different bodies so to speak. While there is always more that could be said about a topic like emotions, I think Evans did a great job at exploring the topic from his particular perspective and, as such, I would encourage others to read it.
I just loved this series by Oxford University Press. These are comprehensive introductions, a literature review written by expert scholars but for common readers. I have listed few out of 100s they have published. And this is third I am reading.
I will be reading one more, "History of emotions" in this series on the same topic.
I teach n studied this topic as a part of Organizational behavior. However haven't read such a nice in depth review.
Highly recommend to anyone interested in emotions. Managers, trainers, counselor, coaches, n students all shall benefit from this lucid write up.
This is an interesting audiobook, but it’s probably better read than actually listened to.
It is essentially a review psychological, philosophical, and scientific perspectives on human emotions from Aristotle to the present day.
The author spends 30 minutes, talking about artificial intelligence and trying to relate that to human emotions. If he’s going to go down that path, he needs to update this work. It was published in 2019, and advances in AI in the last three years have been massive..
Another one of those books which I bought mindlessly based on the title. But this time, it worked out well. Dylan Evans writing is easy to understand which makes the reading very accessible and interesting. But the book is quite short, finished it around 2-3 hours. . It is really just an introduction, but a worthwhile one at that. . Read my full review https://aarifbillah.com/emotion-the-s...