The Passions: Emotions and the Meaning of LifeAn abridged reprint of the Doubleday edition of 1976, with new preface and conclusion by the author. |
Contents
REASON AND THE PASSIONS | 1 |
LIFE AS THE PROBLEM | 27 |
THE NEW ROMANTICISM | 49 |
THE MYTH OF THE PASSIONS | 67 |
PHYSIOLOGY FEELINGS AND BEHAVIOR | 89 |
A SUBJECTIVE THEORY OF THE PASSIONS 11 1 | 111 |
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Common terms and phrases
Absurd action anger angry argued Aristotle become behavior Camus Camus's cause cerned conception concern constitute course CRITERIA defensive demands depression desire desperate direct DISTANCE effective embarrassment emotions Emotions and Memory envy EVALUATIONS example experience expression fact fear feelings forces Freud guilt hate hatred human hydraulic model ideology important indignation inferior Inner-directed innocence intentional object INTERSUBJECTIVITY intimacy involve irrational J. L. Austin James-Lange theory jealousy judge judgments lives logic lover matter Max Scheler meaning ment mood moral Myth Myth of Sisyphus mythology nature never Nietzsche object offense one's oneself ourselves Outer-directed particular passions person philosophy pity possible pride primal scream problem psychology rational Reality reason reflection resentment responsibility role Romantic Romantic love Romanticism satisfaction SCOPE/FOCUS self-esteem sense shame Similarly simply sions Sisyphus someone status Stendhal strategy structures subhuman subjective superiority surreality theory thesis thinking tion tional tive usually values vanity worship
References to this book
Cognition and Emotion: From Order to Disorder Michael J. Power,Tim Dalgleish No preview available - 2008 |