If the word “sad” did not exist in English and had never
existed, would we still have the capacity to be sad or see sadness in
others? In her book How Emotions Are Made, Lisa Feldman Barrett suggests not.
Sadness would not exist because we would have no concept of it, there would be
no state of mind our brains could label as “sad” and consequently we would have
no capacity to be sad or perceive sadness in others.
An emotion is your
brain’s creation of what your bodily sensations mean, in relation to what is
going on around you in the world.
Emotions are not
reactions to the world. You are not a passive receiver of sensory input but an
active constructor of your emotions. From sensory input and past experience,
your brain constructs meaning and prescribes action.
A physical event like
a change in heart rate, blood pressure, or respiration becomes an emotional
experience only when we, with emotion concepts that we have learned from our
culture, imbue the sensations with additional functions by social agreement.
Lisa Feldman Barrett - How Emotions Are Made: The Secret
Life of the Brain
To my mind the book is certainly not beyond criticism but is
engaging, well presented and the core message of the book is a particularly powerful
one.
For example – moving on from the word “sad”. A similar
question arises if the word “offence” did not exist in English and had never
existed. Would we still have the capacity to take offence or be offended? Although
she does not use this particular example, in her book, Professor Barrett’s neurological
work suggests not. As with sadness, offence in this emotional sense would not
exist because we would have no concept of it. Again there would be no state of
mind our brains could label as “offended” and we would have no ability to
perceive it in other people.
In Professor Barrett’s interpretation of modern neuroscience,
emotions are concepts and not forced responses to a range of situations and
circumstances. An emotion is a fluid and diffuse conceptual framework within which
we make sense of social situations and our own bodily reactions to those
situations, but any emotion could be different. It depends on our goals.
When you walk into an
entirely new situation, you don’t experience it based solely on how things
look, sound, or smell. Your experience it based on your goal. So, what’s
happening in your brain when you categorize? You are not finding similarities
in the world but creating them. When your brain needs a concept, it constructs
one on the fly, mixing and matching from a population of instances from your
past experience, to best fit your goals in a particular situation. And herein
lies a key to understanding how emotions are made.
Emotion concepts are
goal-based concepts.
In other words, the neuroscience of emotion seems to support something we probably already know or suspect about people who claim to be
offended by the politically incorrect. It tells us that their emotional
reaction to what they perceive as offensive is a learned, goal-based reaction. It is a
genuine emotional reaction but it is still learned, still goal-based and could be different or even unlearned.
In general the offended are responsible for their own
emotional concepts, they are responsible for feeling offended. It suits them to
be offended so they are.
Professor Barrett has written an intriguing book and it is well
worth reading. Depending upon your goals of course.
4 comments:
Emotion begins where experience ends?
A rose by any other name would smell as sweet.
If I see her book in the charity shop I might pay the 90p.
"So, what’s happening in your brain when you categorize?"
What brain?
Demetrius - it often dictates experience too. We see and hear what we are emotionally prepared to see and hear.
Roger - it's a powerful story so I don't think you will see many copies in charity shops. Unless it is too powerful of course.
James - the tired one which has sometimes seen too much to want to see more.
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