Whoa, only 5% in and already my view of emotions has been paradigm-shifted by @LFeldmanBarrett book How Emotions Are Made http://amzn.to/2HDPN6D thanks whoever recommended it
This constructivist theory of emotion is the relativity theory required to understand identity politics
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Replying to @vgr @LFeldmanBarrett
Might not be relevant but afaict this contradicts a lot stuff that seems more solid. Check outhttps://www.amazon.com/Archaeology-Mind-Neuroevolutionary-Interpersonal-Neurobiology/dp/0393705315 …
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Replying to @garybasin @LFeldmanBarrett
That seems to represent the classical theory of emotion that Barrett’s book debunks pretty convincingly in the first 5%.
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Replying to @vgr @LFeldmanBarrett
Could you post some specific claims? Panksepp shows how there are core, "primitive" emotional responses and behaviors that are shared. He does not argue against more complex emotions or emotional regulation being more constructivist
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Replying to @garybasin @LFeldmanBarrett
Too hard to summarize. Read the book if you’re interested.
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Ok I read first 5%. This is more pop neuro than Panksepp so maybe unfair to compare. I don't see much contradiction. Simplification, yes. Also perhaps attacking a strawman of classic neuro. Or perhaps Panksepp is not classic neuro. Eg he would not consider Happy or Angry as corepic.twitter.com/7kWHcCoHmO
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The very idea of core emotions is in a way the wrong phenomenological level. It’s like classifying clouds: yes, useful, correlated to underlying physics etc, but the appropriate granularity of modeling rigor for strong explanations of weather is Navier-Stokes equations.
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Replying to @vgr @LFeldmanBarrett
I don't think they are core in the sense of fundamental particles
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