The Manifold of Sense - Part II

     

How To Stay Excited To Succeed in A Work At Home Business
Category:
 

Business Plan - your statement of intent
Category:
 

No Win No Fee Claims - understanding what you pay
Category:
 

Standard Life performance stuns analysts
Category:
 

Designing A Good Budget For An Early Retirement
Category:
 

Bush Acknowledges Economic Woes, Expresses Optimism
Category:
 

Unsecured personal loans - for tenants as well as homeowners
Category:
 

Hoodia Patch ? How It Works
Category:
 

Debt Consolidation Loans - Any Other Option
Category:
 

The Different Types Of Remortgage Loans
Category:
 

College Weight Gain
Category:
Health / Fitness  

Christian Singles Dating Online
Category:
Computers  

Weight Loss Hypnosis - Planning and Executing
Category:
Health / Fitness  

Visit Santa Barbara California
Category:
travel  

Work at home business opportunities
Category:
 

Online Mortgage Lending
Category:
 

Sony Ericsson w850i - Your all-purpose mobile phone
Category:
 

Italians Complete Parliamentary Voting Today
Category:
 

WHO Warns Drug-Resistant TB Growing
Category:
 

Life After Bankruptcy
Category:
 

Chad President Breaks Diplomatic Ties With Sudan
Category:
 

Tips on Accommodations
Category:
Finance / Investment  

Why Blogging Is The Next Great Internet Business Opportunity
Category:
 

7 Secrets to Higher Sales
Category:
 

Islamist Militiamen Seize Control of Key Somali Port
Category:
 

How Charging the Lead Acid Battery(4)?
Category:
 

Affiliate Marketing - Checking Clickbank Products For Customer S...
Category:
 

How to sell a business
Category:
 

The True Spirit of Christmas
Category:
 

How To Get Accepted For A Personal Loan?
Category:
 

How I Get ALL The Subscribers I Want, And You Can Too!
Category:
 

The One Thing I Always Get Asked About Prosperity Is: "What?s Th...
Category:
 

China Says US Plan to Shoot Down Satellite May Harm Security
Category:
 

Iraq's Foreign Minister: US, Iran, Syria to Attend Baghdad Talks
Category:
 

Seven Search Engine Similarities
Category:
 

Where to Find Discount Wedgwood China
Category:
Home And Family  

Variable vs. Fixed Rate Credit Cards: Understand the Difference
Category:
 

Atkins and diabetes
Category:
Health / Fitness  

Tips On Makeup For Acne Scars
Category:
Health / Fitness  

Anxiety self help
Category:
Health / Fitness  

"The Real Secret Of Network Marketing Success"
Category:
 

President Bush Stresses a Lasting Cease-Fire in Mideast
Category:
 

How to Achieve Debt Consolidation with Bad Credit
Category:
Finance / Investment  

Bush Administration Resists Pakistan Aid Cuts
Category:
 

The COMPLETE Guide For Fast Easy Ways To Lose Weight
Category:
Health / Fitness  

Big Bass Fishing Adventures
Category:
Sports  

What Is The Best Way To Pay Off All Of My Debts Using A Free Deb...
Category:
 

5 Strategies for Stress Reduction for Attorneys
Category:
 

The Raw Food Diet
Category:
Health / Fitness  

Boost the Sales Power of Your Trade Show Exhibit
Category:
 

US Commander, Ambassador Call on Iraqis to Reject Violence
Category:
 

The Greatest Gift - What is It?
Category:
 

Build The Path and They Will Come
Category:
 

Algae Blooming: Murray Blue Green Algae
Category:
Health / Fitness  

5 Ways To Turn A Nightmare Relationship Into A Dream Come True
Category:
Self Help  

The Death of the Loyal Customer
Category:
Business  

European Election Observers Assume Posts in Togo
Category:
 

SearchInform search engine: search in essence, based on SQL-quer...
Category:
Computers  

THE IMPACT OF ACNE
Category:
Health / Fitness  

WTO Warned Patent Rules Shrinking Access to Cheap Drugs for Poor...
Category:
 

Pills for Breast Enhancement
Category:
Health / Fitness  

Online casinos are losing thousands of customers every day
Category:
Entertainment / Television  

Growing Your Online Business in Three Easy Steps
Category:
 

ALL ABOUT TIME
Category:
 

Attitude Attracts
Category:
 

Learn About Allergies and The Relationship To Food
Category:
Health / Fitness  

Spoonman
Category:
Entertainment / Television  

Afghan General Wants Special Forces To Fight Terrorists
Category:
 

Ivory Coast Government Resumes Work Without Rebels
Category:
 

What's the Difference between Good Debt and Bad Debt?
Category:
 

The Whole is the Illusion
Category:
Self Help  

How Two Powerful Words Can Guarantee You Success
Category:
 

The Budget Webmaster's 6 Step Guide to Improving Existing Rankin...
Category:
Business  

The Six Benefits of a Women's Retreat
Category:
 


Category:

       

The Manifold of Sense Part II 0 article

The Manifold of Sense - Part II


To say that emotions are cognitions is to say nothing.

By Sam Vaknin
Category: 0

Submit your Recipes Here!


To say that emotions are cognitions is to say nothing. We understand cognition even less than we understand emotions (with the exception of the mechanics of cognition). To say that emotions are caused by cognitions or cause cognitions (emotivism) or are part of a motivational process ? does not answer the question: "What are emotions?". Emotions do cause us to apprehend and perceive things in a certain way and even to act accordingly. But WHAT are emotions? Granted, there are strong, perhaps necessary, connections between emotions and knowledge and, in this respect, emotions are ways of perceiving the world and interacting with it. Perhaps emotions are even rational strategies of adaptation and survival and not stochastic, isolated inter-psychic events. Perhaps Plato was wrong in saying that emotions conflict with reason and thus obscure the right way of apprehending reality. Perhaps he is right: fears do become phobias, emotions do depend on one's experience and character. As we have it in psychoanalysis, emotions may be reactions to the unconscious rather than to the world. Yet, again, Sartre may be right in saying that emotions are a "modus vivendi", the way we "live" the world, our perceptions coupled with our bodily reactions. He wrote: "(we live the world) as though the relations between things were governed not by deterministic processes but by magic". Even a rationally grounded emotion (fear which generates flight from a source of danger) is really a magical transformation (the ersatz elimination of that source). Emotions sometimes mislead. People may perceive the same, analyze the same, evaluate the situation the same, respond along the same vein ? and yet have different emotional reactions. It does not seem necessary (even if it were sufficient) to postulate the existence of "preferred" cognitions ? those that enjoy an "overcoat" of emotions. Either all cognitions generate emotions, or none does. But, again, WHAT are emotions?

We all possess some kind of sense awareness, a perception of objects and states of things by sensual means. Even a dumb, deaf and blind person still possesses proprioception (perceiving the position and motion of one's limbs). Sense awareness does not include introspection because the subject of introspection is supposed to be mental, unreal, states. Still, if mental states are a misnomer and really we are dealing with internal, physiological, states, then introspection should form an important part of sense awareness. Specialized organs mediate the impact of external objects upon our senses and distinctive types of experience arise as a result of this mediation.

Perception is thought to be comprised of the sensory phase ? its subjective aspect ? and of the conceptual phase. Clearly sensations come before thoughts or beliefs are formed. Suffice it to observe children and animals to be convinced that a sentient being does not necessarily have to have beliefs. One can employ the sense modalities or even have sensory-like phenomena (hunger, thirst, pain, sexual arousal) and, in parallel, engage in introspection because all these have an introspective dimension. It is inevitable: sensations are about how objects feel like, sound, smell and seen to us. The sensations "belong", in one sense, to the objects with which they are identified. But in a deeper, more fundamental sense, they have intrinsic, introspective qualities. This is how we are able to tell them apart. The difference between sensations and propositional attitudes is thus made very clear. Thoughts, beliefs, judgements and knowledge differ only with respect to their content (the proposition believed/judged/known, etc.) and not in their intrinsic quality or feel. Sensations are exactly the opposite: differently felt sensations may relate to the same content. Thoughts can also be classified in terms of intentionality (they are "about" something) ? sensations only in terms of their intrinsic character. They are, therefore, distinct from discursive events (such as reasoning, knowing, thinking, or remembering) and do not depend upon the subject's intellectual endowments (like his power to conceptualize). In this sense, they are mentally "primitive" and probably take place at a level of the psyche where reason and thought have no recourse.

The epistemological status of sensations is much less clear. When we see an object, are we aware of a "visual sensation" in addition to being aware of the object? Perhaps we are only aware of the sensation, wherefrom we infer the existence of an object, or otherwise construct it mentally, indirectly? This is what, the Representative Theory tries to persuade us, the brain does upon encountering the visual stimuli emanating from a real, external object. The Naive Realists say that one is only aware of the external object and that it is the sensation that we infer. This is a less tenable theory because it fails to explain how do we directly know the character of the pertinent sensation.

What is indisputable is that sensation is either an experience or a faculty of having experiences. In the first case, we have to introduce the idea of sense data (the objects of the experience) as distinct from the sensation (the experience itself). But isn't this separation artificial at best? Can sense data exist without sensation? Is "sensation" a mere structure of the language, an internal accusative? Is "to have a sensation" equivalent to "to strike a blow" (as some dictionaries of philosophy have it)? Moreover, sensations must be had by subjects. Are sensations objects? Are they properties of the subjects that have them? Must they intrude upon the subject's consciousness in order to exist ? or can they exist in the "psychic background" (for instance, when the subject is distracted)? Are they mere representations of real events (is pain a representation of injury)? Are they located? We know of sensations when no external object can be correlated with them or when we deal with the obscure, the diffuse, or the general. Some sensations relate to specific instances ? others to kinds of experiences. So, in theory, the same sensation can be experienced by several people. It would be the same KIND of experience ? though, of course, different instances of it. Finally, there are the "oddball" sensations, which are neither entirely bodily ? nor entirely mental. The sensations of being watched or followed are two examples of sensations with both components clearly intertwined.

(continued)

About the Author

Sam Vaknin is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He is a columnist for Central Europe Review, United Press International (UPI) and eBookWeb and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory, Suite101 and searcheurope.com.

Visit Sam's Web site at http://samvak.tripod.com