The Emotional Brain: The Mysterious Underpinnings of Emotional LifeSimon and Schuster, 22 сент. 2015 г. - Всего страниц: 384 What happens in our brains to make us feel fear, love, hate, anger, joy? Do we control our emotions, or do they control us? Do animals have emotions? How can traumatic experiences in early childhood influence adult behavior, even though we have no conscious memory of them? In The Emotional Brain, Joseph LeDoux investigates the origins of human emotions and explains that many exist as part of complex neural systems that evolved to enable us to survive. One of the principal researchers profiled in Daniel Goleman's Emotional Intelligence, LeDoux is a leading authority in the field of neural science. In this provocative book, he explores the brain mechanisms underlying our emotions -- mechanisms that are only now being revealed. |
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... facts, or explain the workings of intuitively obvious things with their experiments. But facts about the workings of the universe, including the one inside your head, are not necessarily intuitively obvious. Sometimes, intuitions are ...
... facts, or explain the workings of intuitively obvious things with their experiments. But facts about the workings of the universe, including the one inside your head, are not necessarily intuitively obvious. Sometimes, intuitions are ...
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... facts about the brain, or at least in hypotheses that have been inspired by such facts, and I hope that you will hear them out. • The first is that the proper level of analysis of a psychological function is the level at which that ...
... facts about the brain, or at least in hypotheses that have been inspired by such facts, and I hope that you will hear them out. • The first is that the proper level of analysis of a psychological function is the level at which that ...
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... facts or highly charged emotions. Emotions easily bump mundane events out of awareness, but nonemotional events (like thoughts) do not so easily displace emotions from the mental spotlight—wishing that anxiety or depression would go ...
... facts or highly charged emotions. Emotions easily bump mundane events out of awareness, but nonemotional events (like thoughts) do not so easily displace emotions from the mental spotlight—wishing that anxiety or depression would go ...
Стр. 20
... fact that the study of emotion has long been ignored by the field of cognitive science, the major scientific enterprise concerned with the nature of the mind today (Chapter 2). Cognitive science treats minds like computers and has ...
... fact that the study of emotion has long been ignored by the field of cognitive science, the major scientific enterprise concerned with the nature of the mind today (Chapter 2). Cognitive science treats minds like computers and has ...
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... fact often been viewed as waging an inner battle for the control of the human psyche. Plato, for example, said that passions and desires and fears make it impossible for us to think.6 For him, emotions were like wild horses that have to ...
... fact often been viewed as waging an inner battle for the control of the human psyche. Plato, for example, said that passions and desires and fears make it impossible for us to think.6 For him, emotions were like wild horses that have to ...
Содержание
9 | |
22 | |
42 | |
THE HOLY GRAIL | 73 |
THE WAY WE WERE | 104 |
A FEW DEGREES OF SEPARATION | 138 |
REMEMBRANCE OF EMOTIONS PAST | 179 |
WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE | 225 |
ONCE MORE WITH FEELINGS | 267 |
Другие издания - Просмотреть все
The Emotional Brain: The Mysterious Underpinnings of Emotional Life Joseph Ledoux Ограниченный просмотр - 1998 |
The Emotional Brain: The Mysterious Underpinnings of Emotional Life Joseph E. LeDoux Просмотр фрагмента - 1996 |
The Emotional Brain: The Mysterious Underpinnings of Emotional Life Joseph Ledoux Просмотр фрагмента - 1998 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
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