articlePerspectives on Psychological ScienceFeb 16, 2006Closed access

Are Emotions Natural Kinds?

Boston College

PubMed
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Abstract

Laypeople and scientists alike believe that they know anger, or sadness, or fear, when they see it. These emotions and a few others are presumed to have specific causal mechanisms in the brain and properties that are observable (on the face, in the voice, in the body, or in experience)-that is, they are assumed to be natural kinds. If a given emotion is a natural kind and can be identified objectively, then it is possible to make discoveries about that emotion. Indeed, the scientific study of emotion is founded on this assumption. In this article, I review the accumulating empirical evidence that is inconsistent with the view that there are kinds of emotion with boundaries that are carved in nature. I then…

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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Sadness
  • Anger
  • Natural (archaeology)
  • Psychology
  • Affective science
  • Cognitive psychology
  • Face (sociological concept)
  • Emotion classification
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