As i see it both are labels the mind attaches to emotions. It's not the labels themselves that are important/interesting, but it's the motivations and the process of labeling that's important. — skyblack
Well, labels are context dependent. — Shawn
Anything will puzzle the puzzled, unless they start looking and inquiring for themselves.But, there are some situations like labile emotions where they seemingly spontaneously arise, which might puzzle a person experiencing them. — Shawn
This might seem like a straightforward question given how it's phrased; but, is there another classification for emotions that neither labels them as "rational" or "irrational"? — Shawn
I hope it makes a little sense to avoid the dichotomy of either treating emotions as "rational" or "irrational"? — Shawn
Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, in their book, Thinking, Fast & Slow, described the function of Emotions in terms that don't demean them as "irrational". Emotions (Happiness, Sadness, Fear, Anger, Love) are typically quick automatic responses to situations that have been encountered before, and recorded in memory as beliefs about what's good or bad, and what behaviors worked in the past, to maximize the good and minimize the bad. Although some innate responses seem to be somehow recorded in genes as "race memory".This might seem like a straightforward question given how it's phrased; but, is there another classification for emotions that neither labels them as "rational" or "irrational"? — Shawn
Humans, after all, reason to a logical judgement, but reason from an aesthetic judgement. On the one hand, we have to understand things about an object before we know what the object is, but on the other hand, we very well may already have feelings about something before we know what it is about it, that causes those feelings.
Expressions of emotion may be rational/irrational. But emotions themselves, as purely subjective conditions, are not. — Mww
The heart has reasons that reason cannot know. — Blaise Pascal
Reason is, and ought only to be the slave of the passions, and can never pretend to any other office than to serve and obey them. — David Hume
emotions provide an aesthetic 'intuition' about a decision and its potential outcome based on reason. How do these aesthetic judgements arise or change in one's mind? — Shawn
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