Do you believe that emotions are universal? Why or why not?
Provide evidence and detail from...
Do you believe that emotions are universal? Why or why not?
Provide evidence and detail from your readings/research to support
your answer.
Solutions
Expert Solution
It is widely believed that
human emotions, from love to ambition to pride or desire for
freedom, for instance, are hardwired into our brain and that,
therefore, both their range and their nature are universal, shared
by humanity as a whole. This belief is wrong and itself reflects
the fundamental universalism of modern Western, particularly
American, thought and its tendency to consider all human
consciousness and behavior as a function of biology.
Both comparative zoology
and comparative history show that, above the limited range of
emotions we share, as animals, with other animal species, what
moves human beings and makes them suffer in one culture or society
may be dramatically different from the emotions shaping the living
experiences in another one.
Emotions, or feelings, as
the name suggests, are experienced through physical sensations. In
this they differ from other mental experiences, usually called
“cognitive.” The part of sensations in an emotion allows us to
place it into one of three categories: primary emotions,
secondary emotions, and tertiary
emotions.
Primary emotions
are experienced through specific sensations and represent the
direct reaction of the organism to the stimuli of its physical
environment. They include such experiences as pain and pleasure,
fear, positive and negative excitement (joy and anxiety), hunger
and satiation, and their biological function is to increase the
individual organism’s survival. It is clear that these primary
emotions are common to humans and other animals.
We also share with other
animals more complex, secondary emotions which lack a
physical expression specific to them and are expressed through
various combinations of physical sensations. These are emotions
such as affection, which we see plainly in the species of birds
(penguins, swans) and mammals (wolves) which mate for life and in
the relations between mothers and their young among numerous
species of mammals.
Physically, affection is,
most probably, expressed through sensations of pleasure and joyful
excitement. Animals that are capable of affection are also capable
of sorrow, which must express itself through similar
neurobiological mechanisms as pain. This is what they feel when
they lose, as often happens in the animal kingdom (think how many
mothers lose their babies and vice versa) the object of their
affection. One could add to these the feelings of sympathy and
pity, on the one hand, and anger--outraged authority, which have
been regularly observed in great apes and monkeys, as well as in
social mammals such as wolves and lions.
Secondary emotions also
perform an obvious biological function: they strengthen the social
order within the species and thus ensure the survival of the
species. For this reason, like sensations, or primary emotions,
which ensure the adaptation and survival of the individual
organism, they indeed must be hardwired into the brain and produced
genetically.
But this is not so with the
great majority of our emotions, twice removed, so to speak, from
their physical expression, which we don’t share with other
animals. These tertiary emotions include common
feelings, such as love, ambition, pride, self-respect, shame,
guilt, inspiration, enthusiasm, sadness, awe, admiration, humility
and humiliation, sense of justice and injustice, envy, malice,
resentment, cruelty, hatred, and so on and so forth.
It is not that other
animals don’t have the capacity for these complex emotions: first,
capacities can only be observed in realization, and therefore we do
not know what capacities other animals have or don’t have; second,
anyone who has lived with a dog knows that dogs --our pets--are
capable of many of these feelings, for sure. We do not share
tertiary emotions with other (wild) animals, even such closely
related to our biological species as chimpanzees, precisely because
they don’t have a biological function; they are not needed for
physical survival, and so they are not hardwired into our bodies.
They are produced culturally, and not genetically. The brain
supports but does not provide for them. Saying that the great
majority of human emotions are produced culturally implies that
each one of them is a product of a specific culture, that is, an
historical product.
This means that the
emotional experiences of people in different cultures are not the
same and may even be very different. But emotional experience is a
major part of our mental life, our mind. This, therefore, means
that mental life associated with different cultures is likely to be
different, i.e., that, while there is a specific brain structure
that represents every human brain, there is no one human mind
that can serve as the model of all minds.
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Diversity Training
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At least 250-300
words