Winstonm, on 2012-March-01, 18:40, said:
I would not say we are "emotional creatures", but rather creatures that have emotions. It would be ludicrous to suggest that all humans do and should rely strictly on emotions for all decisions and actions. Emotions are often false or based on bad information - GIGO.
As we age, we learn to control or even ignore our emotions, and one of the most valuable lessons to learn is that actions rule emotions, not the other way round. We are not required to act based on how we feel, and our actions will alter our emotions.
Act enthusiastic and you'll be enthusiastic is not only a slogan, but a fact.
b)As for the other points in your post, you seem confused by science versus emotions - the underlying provocations for the actions you suggest - horrendous experiments in concentration camps and genetic engineering - these are examples of unbridled emotion, not of crisp reasoning.
c) However, I realize a recent PEW survey found that the authoritarian/individualistic personality will not abandon his narrative beliefs with a higher degree of education; he will, in fact, become more entrenched.
That is why arguments, logical or not, are ultimately fruitless.
Well, a couple of things about that....tell someone who is extremely depressed to "act enthusiastic and you will be enthusiastic" and he will likely impolitely tell you to take a hike, if he can find the energy. It's certainly not always that simple. Severe depression is a terrible thing and telling people they can talk themselves out of it is like telling someone they can talk themselves out of a broken arm.
To be sure, people who are in a relatively stable frame of mind CAN affect their behaviour and emotions by practicing more productive thought and fostering positive emotions; one study found that deliberately considering the things they have to be grateful for for 15 minutes each day, helped heal people who were moderately depressed. But then, so does prayer help to heal, according to other studies (that's an aside I couldn't resist:))
I'm not at all sure you would find many competent mental health professionals agreeing with you that emotions can be "false" though they most certainly can be based on false information. I am assuming we are discussing truly felt emotion, not the crocodile tears sort which are deliberately presented but have no emotion whatever behind them. Emotions are what they are, and you suppress and deny strong ones at a risk of developing all sorts of other little or not so little problems. Here is a quote about just one of several recognized medical conditions relating to this question.
Quote:
The Harvard psychiatrist Peter Sifneos originally coined the term in 1972 to describe people who had extreme difficulty in emotional cognition. The word alexithymia literally means no words for mood. People with this problem lacked the ability to understanding, processing or describing their feelings verbally. As a result, most people who have the problem are largely unaware of their own feelings or what they signify. As a result they only rarely talk about their emotions or their emotional preferences, and they are largely unable to use their feelings or imagination to focus and fuel their drives and motivations.
People with alexithymia seem unable to fantasize and many report multiple somatic symptoms. However, alexithymia is also associated with a number of other complaints, such as hypertension, irritable bowel syndrome, substance use disorders, and some anxiety disorders. Their speech is often concrete, mundane and closely tied to external events. So they will describe physical symptoms rather than emotions, and
dont understand that their bodily sensations are signals of emotional distress. (my emphasis)
Alexithymia lies on spectrum... For some people it is little more than an inability to get in touch with their emotions. But at the other end of the spectrum are a number of illnesses in which alexithymia may occur, including schizoid personality disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, anorexia nervosa or Asperger's syndrome. It is also much more common in victims of trauma.
End Quote
I am not suggesting that people should ACT on their rage, for example, maybe by going out and popping that annoying neighbor in the nose, but they do need to recognise what they feel .and more importantly, often, what is causing the emotion in the first place, and find ways to deal with it. Sometimes it isn't even the neighbor that is the root of the problem, but only the final straw on a load of undealt with other problems.
One thing I ran across the other day was an interview with a Dr Amen who had some fairly compelling things to say about how the health of the brain affects behaviour (and, incidentally, the concept of free will!) People who have damaged their brains inadvertently or otherwise can undergo quite remarkable changes in their interaction with the world. And these changes can sometimes be reversed if the brain is restored to a healthy condition. This makes me wonder about some of the historical monsters and how much misery may have been caused by literally!! an unhealthy brain. I also wondered what the brains of some of today's politicos might look like ...full of holes, some of them, I'm guessing. Anyway.
Science has done a remarkable job in learning what triggers behaviour and it isn't logic or reason. Successful marketters don't give much weight on promoting rational reasons for why you should buy their widget, they give you social proof "everyone else has one and they LOVE it..here's Bob to tell you how his life has become WONDERFUL since he got it!!" _ or the reverse - "be the only one in your neighborhood to grown these unique and fabulous roses that all your neighbors will envy" or they give the potential customer something to make them feel gratitude and the need to reciprocate, or they provide some authority figure to lead them to the right path of buying their widget and so forth.
They have tracked eye movements so they know where to place different bits of copy or a graphic and which colors to use where for optimum effectiveness....and they test constantly to check and compare results. By manipulating the environment in sometimes virtually unnoticeable ways, they can alter behaviour and make people more likely to buy. The product is the same, it's only that when it's presented in one way people are much more likely to buy than if it's presented a different way. Logic would suggest that somehow the changes make the product more attractive..an emotional response.
Of course, some people are more susceptible to some sorts of techniques than others. Some people have or develop a sort of immunity through overexposure, sort of the boy who cried wolf too many times sort of thing. That said, highly successful marketters likely know a whole lot more about human psychology and what makes people do things than some psychologists and psychiatrists as far as I can tell.
Of course it would be ludicrous to suggest that people operate ONLY on emotion. But people ignore the emotional responses they have to the world around them at their peril.And this aspect of humanity is valued..to describe someone as "a cold fish" is instantly recognized as denigrating. The forums for people suffering from PTSD discuss their frustration with "being numb" and wondering what others have tried or done in order to "feel" again and will they ever be able to. Apparently a totally nonemotional life is a fairly bleak one. But they undoubtedly do make decisions and they do manage from day to day.
It's emotion, not reason, that makes people buy houses that they can't possibly afford, emotion that makes people shoulder rifles and go off to war and do other such things that are at the very least a hazard to their well being and even their lives.
Rats. I can't figure out how you break the quote up into pieces. So just left the quote intact and refer to it. sort of.
b)I don't think you can blame religion for such things as the crusades and then absolve science for the human experiments done in concentration camps. That's a double standard if ever I saw one. The crusades went forward under the banner of Christianity and the experiments went forward under the banner of science.
As far as the GMO experiments go, the only emotion I see in those particular corporate offices is greed.
c) Are you referring to me as an authoritarian sort of person? really?