We have found a special hedonic hotspot that is crucial for reward 'liking' and 'wanting' (and codes reward learning too). The opioid hedonic hotspot is shown in red above. It works together with another hedonic hotspot in the more famous nucleus accumbens to generate pleasure 'liking'.
Emotions are actually a sense like sight. — TranscendedRealms
you still would not be able to actually see the good value that the apple has as long as you are not in a positive emotional state. — TranscendedRealms
No value judgment can allow this blind person to see just as how no value judgment or mindset can allow us to see the values in our lives. — TranscendedRealms
I'm not sure what you're not understanding. If a person judges himself as having the ability to see when he is blind, then he would still not be able to see. In that same sense, if we judge our lives as having good value to us in the absence of our positive emotions, then we would still not be able to actually see that good value. — TranscendedRealms
Emotions are actually a sense like sight. They allow us to see the values that things and situations hold in our lives. — TranscendedRealms
Emotionality is nearly always a complex of more than one 'emotion': in grief I am angry, in despair I often keep hopeful, and so on. To place them on some binary scale feels trivial. — mcdoodle
Emotions are actually a sense like sight. They allow us to see the values that things and situations hold in our lives. It is only our positive emotions that allow us to see the positive qualities of life (i.e. the good values) while it is only our negative emotions that allow us to see the negative qualities of life (i.e. the bad values). — TranscendedRealms
According to that effect chart, negative expressions and tones reflect negative emotions while positive expressions and tones reflect positive emotions. — TranscendedRealms
The question then for the study of emotionality would be what is the fewest such dichotomies that you could get away with in modelling the brain's architecture. — apokrisis
But do you agree that emotions are the only way we can perceive value in our lives? That's where my theory was getting at. I'm also not sure why putting emotions into positive and negative categories would be the wrong thing to do. When we have what we normally call a positive emotion, this emotion feels entirely distinct from what we call a negative emotion. To make this distinction, we say that emotions are either positive or negative. You could also have a mix of positive and negative emotions as well which is what I've pointed out earlier. — TranscendedRealms
I was particularly struck by work done by Roddy Cowie et al for the HUMAINE project — mcdoodle
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