Transcript Document

PSYC18 2009 – Psychology of Emotion
Professor: Gerald Cupchik
Office: S634
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Thursdays 10-11; 2-3
Phone: 416-287-7467
TA: Michelle Hilscher
Office: S142C
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Thursdays 10-11 am
Course website:
www.utsc.utoronto.ca/~cupchik/psyc18.htm
Textbook:
Oatley, Keltner & Jenkins (2006, 2nd Ed.)
Understanding Emotions.
We can look at the psychology of emotion from different viewpoints:
(1) The person in the street wants to know…
How can I be more/less emotional?
Are some people generally disposed
to be more or less emotional?
How can I learn to recognize the
emotional states and experiences of
others?
How can I predict, explain, or
understand the emotions of others?
We can look at the psychology of emotion from different viewpoints:
(2) The research psychologist wants to know…
How can emotion be a phenomenon unto itself while at the same time
being related to the mind (i.e., thought) and body (i.e., motor
expression and somatic response)?
What is the evolutionary function of emotion?
Are there individual differences in emotional style?
What is the relation between emotion experience and emotion
management?
What is the relation between expression and experience?
What is the difference between expression and impression?
What are the relations between feeling and emotion?
We can look at the psychology of emotion from different viewpoints:
(3) The clinical psychologist wants to know…
How to help people deal with unconscious or repressed emotions.
How to help people deal with loss.
How to help people become more integrated and productive.
How to help people sleep better, deal with anxiety, find love, etc.
Let’s start with the first major challenge:
To understand emotion as a distinctive experience while at the same
time trying to understand how it interacts with cognitive (i.e., thought)
and bodily processes.
Worlds
Ludwig Binswanger proposed three worlds:
i.
Eigenwelt – personal and private (with ourselves)
ii.
Mitwelt – social world (with others)
iii.
Umwelt – organic and physical world (the world around)
Existential concept of thrownness – we are thrown, as if by accident,
into particular worlds.
Life Themes
i.
Adaptation (Darwin)
ii.
Meaning-in-the-world (Existential)
Life Episodes
These are events that take place in these worlds as we struggle with
these life themes.
Personal Life Narratives
We have experiences and feelings about our life-worlds and events that
take place within them. These can be expressed in the forms of
narratives or stories in terms of which we define ourselves. These
stories comprise facts and interpretations of these facts which we take
to be true about ourselves and our worlds.
Layers
Imagine…layers in a cake…of rock in the earth…of the atmosphere.
You are in a life…actually many lives at once.
You are in a world…actually many worlds at once.
Four Fundamental Layers
i.
Noetic – includes all mental processes and different forms of
knowing (perceptual, intellectual, emotional)
ii.
Organic – includes all biological processes
iii.
Physical – includes all physical processes
iv. Social – includes all social and cultural systems.
These layers have their own unique properties but also interact with
each other.
Perspectives
Paradox of one body and many selves
Looks like one body and this implies one self… illusion of unity.
But in fact there are many selves in that one body. There are many
layers in the single person.
Fromm spoke about division within the self where people are not sure
how to integrate their many selves.
Interface of Mind and Body (problem of consciousness):
Consciousness lies at the sentient boundary between stimulation from
the outside world and from the inside world, physical, cognitive, and
affective during a particular period of time.
How do we see ourselves?
1. Are we objects or processes? (Are we static or dynamic?)
2. Can we change or are we burdened by our personal histories?
3. Literal viewpoint (externalized view)
As objects with features…grades…status…money
(Closed process)
4. Ironic or metaphorical viewpoint
See ourselves in context, changing
(Open process)
5. Shifting viewpoints (engaged versus detached)
Engaged (absorbed in our experiences)
Detached (outside of our experiences)
6. Can we unify these viewpoints?
Actions
Reactions
WORLDS AGAIN...
Inside one body… affected by the outside world… yet shaped by a
personal existence.
Are you showing how you feel inside?
ADAPTATION and EXPERIENCE are both a two-way street - challenged
and shaped by the outside world yet interpreted in a personal way.
TWO ESSENTIAL COMPLEMENTARITIES
(1) Forms of Knowledge:
Objective
Subjective
Objective knowledge is supposedly about the external public world BUT it
actually reflects internal learned conventions and standards.
Subjective knowledge is supposedly about the internal private world BUT it
is actually projected onto the imagined world out there.
(2) Modes of being in the world:
BUT - LET’S TAKE A LOOK AT THE BIG PICTURE!
You cannot have thoughts without feelings…
You also cannot emotions without thoughts…
The question then is this:
What kind of thought processes go with what kind of feeling processes
when it comes to ADAPTATION and EXPERIENCE?
This is the central question addressed by the course!
How do the mind and body interact to shape adaptation and experience or
the search for meaning?
METHOD
Examining episodes in everyday life…
* Self as object
* Self as process
The search for process…
Acts of Noticing as applied to everyday life…
Apperception… in the world… being and acting in the world… in context…
and aware of it!