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  1. There are three major reasons why we experience emotions. Emotions help to motivate us for action: Emotions help to organize our behaviour and set us in motion to accomplish a goal.

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  2. Moods difer from emotions because they lack stimuli and have no clear starting point. For example, insults can trigger the emotion of anger while an angry mood may arise without apparent cause. Defining emotions is a task that is not yet complete.

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  3. This chapter introduces the topics of this book through this important premise and concludes by listing what we ideally would want from a mature science of emotion, and what entries in this list we will tackle in this book. We wrote this book for two overarching aims.

  4. Jun 5, 2007 · undesirable emotions such as shame through avoidance. Recall that shame derives from personal attributes that are beyond one’s control whereas guilt relates to acts over

  5. To synthesize the growing literature on emotion beliefs, we first provide a conceptual mapping of two superor-dinate beliefs that are central to this domain: (a) beliefs about whether emotions are good or bad and (b) beliefs about whether emotions are controllable or uncontrol-lable.

  6. Why We Are Responsible for Our Emotions* . EUGENE SCHLOSSBERGER . It is often said that one cannot be held responsible for something one cannot help. Indeed, Ted Honderich, Paul Edwards, and C. A. Campbell have suggested that it is obtuse, barbaric, or a solecism to think otherwise.

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  8. Here’s how to model healthy expression of emotions (and why it works so well). Process your thoughts and feelings about a situation out loud while your child is present: “Oh my. I

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