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Restructuring Emotion Theory : Contributions Of William James

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Restructuring Emotion Theory: Contributions of William James to Emotional Psychology The complexities of human emotion and psychology are an age-old discussion, dating as far back as the musings of Plato in 400 BC. Much of psychology pivoted around philosophical concepts until the mid-1800s, when the field was advanced by the works of Darwin, Wundt, and Pavlov. It was during this era that the writings of an American psychologist by the name of William James became prominent, catalyzing the transition from structuralism to the model of psychological functionalism, and sparking the fields of pragmatism and radical empiricism. Amid a flurry of works promoting these topics—functionalism in particular—one piece is sometimes forgotten, despite …show more content…

The first of these, is that there exists separate, distinct centers in the brain which function solely to produce emotions. The latter, and the one he develops, is that “[emotions] correspond to processes occurring in the motor and sensory centres,” (James, 1884). Following this assumption that the regions governing emotions are synonymous with those responsible for sensory-motor functions, James made his first claim: “that the emotional brain-processes no only resemble the ordinary sensorial brain-processes, but in very truth are nothing but such processes variously combined,” (James, 1884). In short, emotions are the products of different combinations of sensory information. This proposition is deceivingly simple at first, and can be summarized fairly quickly. James theorizes that the common idea that stimuli beget the arousal of an emotion, which in turn causes physiological responses, is in fact incorrect. Instead, James asserts that stimuli elicit physiological changes in the human body, which in turn and in combination, are perceived as an “emotion.” Concisely put, emotions are the perception of physiological changes in response to a stimuli. James limits his definition of an emotion to include only “those that have a distinct bodily expression,” such as contortions of the face in anger, or production of tears when sad (James, 1884). These bodily expressions are not limited to conscious physiological changes, but also include those controlled by

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