Human nature clearly doesn't care too much about our consciously chosen goals and we seem to be emotionally interested in evolutionary goals like social status, resources and sex irregardless of what we think. — Qmeri
But our emotions do seem to care what we think about how to achieve our goals. — Qmeri
Therefore our emotions can be influenced indirectly by our conscious conclusions of how to achieve our natural goals. — Qmeri
So, with this technique one can keep ones logical world view intact while at the same time he fools his intuition and emotions to feel pretty much whatever he wants. If your emotions want to live in magical world where everything is the very best in a magically perfect way - just make your emotions believe that that is true and go on and concentrate on something you actually chose to concentrate on. — Qmeri
using regular motion and registry to generate a field... I have created a lane in memory. My hack is to create many lanes, so that a field is generated of motion registry....My own solipsistic energy shell. — Qwex
Emotions don't really 'care' about anything, they're most often conceived as states of the brain (and body) which facilitate different response patterns. You'll have to explain this new use of the term. — Isaac
This is not indirect. Eric Corchesne demonstrated that even 2 year old children run decisions through the cerebral cortex prior to emotional changes. It's quite the normal pattern. — Isaac
This seems to just be Cognitive Behavioural Therapy, am I missing some distinction? — Isaac
I pretty much use "emotion" as anything "that feels like something" in ones experience in this context. — Qmeri
With direct I meant direct control where one could simply consciously choose what to feel whenever. — Qmeri
'm not an expert on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, so I can't say. Perhaps? — Qmeri
so if you simply behave in the way you've rationally concluded you ought to, your emotions and thoughts 'catch up' with this new approach — Isaac
This I disagree with and it is also pretty much in disagreement with the OP since the whole premise of the OP was that I have found it very hard to change certain emotions of mine irregardless of how I think or behave. And the solution was to fool the emotions in a way where they don't have to agree with my thinking or behavior. — Qmeri
I'm glad you found an alternative solution which worked for you, but this is not the sort of thing you can just disagree with. It's a fact of psychology. Not a fact like gravity - we don't have that kind of replicability in psychology - but fact enough that it's not reasonable to reject it without evidence to the contrary. CBT helps thousands every year, it has one of the highest success rates of any therapy. Either it works, or that success is by chance. If you think the latter, you'd really need some reason to think so other than your sample of one. — Isaac
But I'm dubious that it could for example turn any straight person to a true asexual if they wanted to or something else highly linked to human nature like that. — Qmeri
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