Joy, Guilt, Anger, Love (51 page)

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Authors: Giovanni Frazzetto

Tags: #Medical, #Neurology, #Psychology, #Emotions, #Science, #Life Sciences, #Neuroscience

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and opioids, 194, 199
and oxytocin, 231
and reward system of the brain,
189–190
dopaminergic system, 172
dorsal anterior cingulate cortex
(dACC), 121
dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC), 57, 175
drugs, 193–195, 199
Duchenne, Guillaume-Benjamin-Amand, 9, 183–184
Duchenne smile, 184, 202, 206–207
Duse, Eleonora, 155–156, 161
Eagleman, David, 33–34, 37–38
ego (Freudian concept), 14–15, 71–72,
72
, 258n10
Einstein, Albert, 5
Eisenberger, Naomi, 121
electroencephalography (EEG), 201–202
embarrassment, 263n8
emoticons, 129, 273n32
emotional memory, 158, 278n27
emotional styles, 203, 284n39
emotions
evolutionary origins of, 9, 12
feelings compared to, 11, 128
fMRI imaging of, 69–71
good and bad emotions (
see
negative emotions; positive emotions)
historical attitudes toward, 13–15
as innate, 10
and memory, 51–52
and neuroanatomy, 16–18, 73
universality of, 11–12
See also
anger and aggression; anxiety; empathy; grief; guilt; joy and happiness; love
empathy, 145–177
and artwork, 148, 264n19
and mirror-neuron system, 149–153
as positive emotion, 11
term, 148
See also
theatre performances
endorphins, 195, 207
Enlightenment, 205, 206, 284n42
environment, 28–31, 101
Epicurus, 204
epigenetic modification, 235, 237
estrogen, 240, 242, 243
eudaimonia, 204–206, 212
evolution
of disgust, 49–50
emotions as outcome of, 9, 12
of guilt, 47, 55
of tears, 116–117
and Wittgenstein, 273n29
existential philosophy, 93–96
The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals
(Darwin), 9–10
eyes and gaze, 171–172, 184, 211, 280n53
Fable of the Bees, or Private Vices, Public Benefits
(Mandeville), 205–206
facial expressions
of anger, 13
Darwin’s study of, 9, 12, 147
of grief, 114,
115
of guilt, 45
and inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), 174
of joy, 183–184, 187
recognition of, 222–223
of shame, 48–49
facial expressions (cont.)
and vagus nerve, 211
and Wittgenstein’s theory on emotions, 128–129
Fallon, Jim, 30, 39
family resemblances theory, 131–132
fear
anxiety compared to, 83–85, 94
and courage, 212
Darwin on, 147–148
evolutionary origins of, 10–11
fear conditioning, 89–90
and guilt, 46
and love, 225, 246, 247
as measured by skin conductance response (SCR), 22
as negative emotion, 11
neural seat of,
91
, 91–92, 97–98
and parental care, 233, 234
passive and active fear, 97–99
physical expressions of, 90
research on, 182
feelings, emotions compared to, 11, 128
fiction, 164–166, 172–177
Fisher, Helen, 223, 240, 242, 243
Fitzpatrick, Susan, 66
fMRI.
See
brain imaging technologies
focus, 18, 190
food consumption, 198–199
forgiveness, 74–75
Frances, Allen, 125
Frayn, Michael, 167
Frederick II, 222
Fredrickson, Barbara, 209–210
Freud, Sigmund
on anxiety, 85
on early-life experiences, 233
on grief and depression, 123–124
on guilt, 43–44, 71
on pleasure and pain, 182
structural theory of the mind, 14–15, 71–72,
72
, 196, 258n10, 266n35
friendships, 209–211, 213, 217
fusiform face area of the brain, 228
Gage, Phineas, 19–20, 21, 39, 259n16
gambling, 20–21
Gaulle, Yvonne de, 203
generalized anxiety disorder (GAD),
88–89, 107
generosity, 208–209
genetics
and amygdala reactivity, 101–102
and anger/aggression, 25–28
and anxiety, 89, 101–102
behavioral effects of, 39, 40
and environment, 28–31
and legal culpability, 31–33,
35–36
and online dating services, 240
and parental care, 235, 236
Ginsberg, Allen, 194
GlaxoSmithKline, 136
Golgi, Camillo, 149
Greene, Joshua, 54–55
grief, 111–143
ancient perspectives on, 137–142
and biomarkers, 130–131
complicated grief (CG), 125
and depression, 122–126
duration of, 125–126
Freud on, 123–124
good grief, 122–126
language of, 126–129
as negative emotion, 11
passage of time in, 112
physical expressions of, 113–116,
115
and physical pain, 119–122, 272n21
prolonged grief disorder (PGD),
125, 142
and separation, 120, 121
stages of, 113
and tears, 116–119
treatment of, 141–142
variation in, 129–132
Gross, Cornelius, 97
guilt, 41–75
anger compared to, 45–46
and bad conduct, 45–47
behavioral effects of, 46–47
brain imaging of, 64–66, 69–71, 73–74
and Caravaggio, 58–61, 62, 63, 69
and choices, 53–55
and disgust, 49–50
evolution of, 47, 55
and forgiveness, 74–75
Freud’s experience with, 43–44, 71
and manipulation, 46
and memory, 51–52
and morality, 45, 49–50, 53–55, 63, 72–73, 263n7
as negative emotion, 11
neural seat of, 56–58,
58
and personal values, 45–47
regret and shame compared to, 47–49
and social contexts, 62–63
and the superego, 15
gun control, 36
Hamlet
(Shakespeare), 146–147
‘handedness’ of the brain, 200–203
hand washing, 263n11
Hauser, Marc, 266n37
heart, anger’s effect on, 37
hedonism, 204–206, 212
Heidegger, Martin, 93–96, 99, 268n21, 269n28
Henry V
(Shakespeare), 168
heroin, 195
Himbas, 186
hippocampus, 16,
17
, 164
Hippocrates, 138–142
Holmes, James, 34, 36, 39
homeostasis, 182
homosexuality, 63, 286n8
hope, 11
Human Genome Project, 27
humility, 61
humours of Hippocrates, 138–142,
140
Huntington’s disease, 27–28
hypothalamus, 230
id (Freudian concept), 14, 71–72,
72
, 258n10
illusion’s role in theatre performances, 172
imagination, 225–227, 242
impulsivity, 24–27
inferior frontal gyrus (IFG)
and adhesion to fiction, 174
and empathy, 152
and fictional vs. real characters,
165, 166
mirroring functions of,
151
,
151–152
inferior parietal lobule (IPL), 151
insula, 152–153
intuition, 22
Jacopo da Lentini, 222
James, William, 84–85, 102–103, 156, 212, 268n12
joy and happiness, 179–213
and anticipation, 219
and asymmetry of the brain, 202
and chills experienced with music,
197–198
contributing factors, 208
cultivation of, 211–212
and dopamine, 194–195
enhanced with drugs, 193–195
and eudaimonia, 204–206, 212

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