In my opinion I do not think that we can know anything purely through emotion because emotions are “reactions or responses related to sense perceptions, internal states, thoughts or beliefs about things or people, real or imagined.” (Emotion as a WOK, Mondelli) Also emotions without the other three areas of knowledge emotions would have no way of expression because to be able to recognize what you feel you have to have logic and reason. To be able to feel your emotions you have to have your sense perception. To be able to say what you feel to yourself and other people around you have to know the correct language and be able to communicate those feelings and emotions. However some people may argue that you can know things purely through …show more content…
The effectiveness of playing those recordings with the carefully chosen words and phrases in them to bring together his ideals eventually lead to Jim Jones having full control over his congregation; so much so that he was able to convince almost near one thousand of his followers to commit mass suicide. The Emotions that his language invoked in his followers gave him power beyond belief. Language plays a very important role in how we interpret, understand and control our emotions or in the case of the Jonestown people relinquish control of their emotions due to the use of persuasive language.
Also another example of how language plays a major role in emotion is in literature, more specifically poetry. In John Donne’s poem A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning the language that he uses creates a very light and open feeling inside of me when I read it. It sounds very elegant and beautiful to read and makes me feel very happy inside.
“Our two souls therefore, which are one,
Though I must go, endure not yet
A breach, but an expansion,
Like gold to aery thinness beat.
If they be two, they are two so 2
As stiff twin compasses are two ;
Thy soul, the fix 'd foot, makes no show
To move, but doth, if th ' other do.
And though it in the centre sit,
Yet, when the other far doth roam,
It leans, and hearkens after it,
And grows erect, as that comes home.
Such wilt thou be to me, who must,
Like th ' other foot,
Our emotions affect us in so many ways. Emotions affect the way we behave, our views and opinions, our relationships and our decision-making; therefore, they are very relevant to our day-to-day lives. It is important that people have an understanding of these emotions and that they are able to interpret them. Emotions can both help and hinder our ability to best live our lives. It is also important to realize that even our emotions are shaped and biased by our environment and those close to us.
Likewise, the language the author uses also clarifies the tone and the theme of the novel. In many positions in the novel, languages such as grief, despair, hate, and revenge
In this speech, the narrator gives an emotional message about dispossession. Not only does he discuss dispossession, but he also talks about the crowd following the law and needing to organize a leader. It was brought up due to a couple being evicted out of their apartment. This speech was a success because his words had a powerful effect on the audience and caused them to become angry. In addition, the narrator got the crowd to do what he wanted them to which was take back the belongings of the couple being evicted back into their apartment. In order for a speech to be effective, it must have a large impact on the people listening. He used an emotional appeal that made this speech the most effective and allowed for the crowd to actually listen. When ranting about the couple to the audience, the narrator states, “Should two old folks live in such junk, cooped up in a filthy room? It’s a great danger, a fire hazard! Old cracked dishes and broken-down chairs. Yes, yes, yes! Look at that old woman, somebody’s mother, somebody’s grandmother, maybe” (277). He is appealing to the crowd’s emotions in order for them to feel bad for the couple and have a strong feeling of displeasure at the occurrence. The narrator succeeded in doing so because the people were outraged and returned the couple’s belongings back into her home. The narrator says, “Look at them, not a shack to pray in or an alley to sing the blues! They’re facing a gun and we’re facing it with them. They don’t want the world, but only Jesus” (279). Furthermore, he used an emotional appeal to rile up the crowd. It was an effective speech for that reason. The narrator’s words were able to have an influence on the audience. Also, the eviction speech was a success because Brother Jack was very pleased with it and invited the narrator to join the Brotherhood. Evidently, it has been expressed that the eviction speech was most effective
Jim Jones gave the people what they wanted to hear. He would help them try and find their better self. That is why he had such a rapid following. Many at the moment thought that the government were not taking care of them so he made them felt like they were going to be take care of. Also he made them feel like they had a community that they were not alone. He would manipulate people by using jesus name. That jesus wanted them to be a certain way or do certain things. His followers are usually vunerable people. Like for example people with addictions and the elderly. He was so persuasive that he told these elderly people to sell
In Affect - A basic Summary of approaches, Andrew Murphie puts forth thought on the concept of affect and how it directly correlates with the language. Affect is described as what occurs right before one becomes aware of how they are feeling, and thus turning that feeling into an emotion. That being true, affect is moment to moment and is constantly changing, for emotion is continually being altered in order for one to be fully present in every point in time. Affect comes and goes instantaneously, for at the instant when it comes, one makes an effort to put affect into words, turning the affect into a feeling or emotion and it is gone. Affect cannot be put into language, but it is always something that will be with one. That being said, one cannot describe one’s affect to another. Though, by trying to talk about one’s affect, one must speak about the instant that created said affect, and by expressing one’s thoughts about their moment to moment experience, one can try to evoke a similar experience in another’s mind.
Emotionism according to Jesse Prinz is a set of views according to which emotions are essential to morality. There are two types of emotionism: 1). Metaphysical emotionism is moral properties are essentially related to emotions and facts without mind independence 2). Epistemic emotionism is moral concepts are essentially related to emotions. Concepts such as right or wrong are emotional states of mind. Further epistemic emotionism is divided into two categories: a). Constitutive is moral concepts are constituted by feelings and b). Dispositional is moral concepts dispose one to have certain feelings. Epistemic emotionism is basically how emotions influence moral judgements. The evidence in support of epistemic emotionism is the dumbfounding experiment. This is where moral attitudes on sex between siblings were studied for a group of young people. Most if not all said that is morally wrong to even think about it and is very inappropriate but failed to give an explanation. Another example involves cannibalism where a woman working in a medical lab cooks and eats part of meat, which was donated to the lab for research purposes. Again this is something immoral, nasty and wrong. Other examples were cheating is wrong or stealing is wrong. Both of these being moral concepts are wrong and unacceptable and they align
To begin, words bring power, which can effect change within emotion. In other words, The Book Thief and Mein Kampf brought examples where powerful words affect emotions. For instance, they compare with each other because the words are so powerful that they impact the people in the same ways. Liesel and Hans’ relationship is extremely strong. Their love shows how the massive power of words can bring people closer together. Also, how they can calm people down; it allows the characters to get away from what is happening in their surroundings. Similarly, in Mein Kampf, there was a gargantuan amount of emotions that it sent through the citizens that read it. On the other hand, Mein Kampf produced emotions that brought anger and fear to characters. Germans who saw their old neighbors being ripped from their homes and pulled through towns to their death were too scared of the nefarious
Another way that language can influence people to do good things is in a poem by Emily Dickinson: “Hope” “Hope is the thing with feathers, That perches in the soul, And sings the tune without the words, And never stops-at all” In that stanza of her poem she is saying that hope is always in your soul and sings a tune of happiness and never stops singing that tune. In another stanza she says “I’ve heard it in the chillest land, And on the strangest sea, Yet-never- in Extremity, It asked a crumb of me.” In the stanza she discussed that she has always had hope and it never left her wherever she went. She also states that even in the hardest places and times, she still had hope, but it never asked anything of her. Another example of uplifting language can be found from Animal Farm is Boxer, the horse’s personal motto “I will work harder.” This quote is inspiring because when all the other animals are done working Boxer is still working and doesn’t complain. After the windmill fell and they were rebuilding it, Boxer worked harder than all the other animals. He got up an hour earlier to work and stays an hour later than all the others working to rebuild the windmill.
Christakis and Fowler state that emotions themselves contain several elements. Emotions contain a conscious element, meaning people are aware of what they’re feeling. They have a physical aspect; emotions are tied to an individuals’ health. They also have a neurological affect; altering activity and blood flow levels in the brain. Finally, emotions contain a visual aspect; they can be expressed in facial expressions and body language.
Emotions are feelings (Alder 140). Emotions involve a variety of components. These components include physiological factors, nonverbal reactions, cognitive interpretations, and verbal expressions. Physiological factors influence a person when they experience strong emotions (Alder 141). For example, if you experience fear, your heart rate will begin to increase, stimulating the parasympathetic nervous system. This results in your blood pressure to increase and an abundant amount of adrenaline to be released. To Saman, emotions are an assortment of different
How an author uses language in a story is more important than you would think. Edgar Allen Poe shows a great example of this in his story The Fall of the House of Usher. His use of diction, the words he uses to paint a picture in the minds of his readers, the detail included and his use of figurative language all contribute to making a good first impression to characterize the rest of the story. In this story, Poe uses very specific detail which directly relates to how well his writing provokes an image in the reader’s mind.
One of Jones' long time followers Tim Stoen explained, "There wasn't anything magical about Jim's power. It was raw politics. He was able to deliver what politicians want, which is power. And how do you get power? By votes. And how do you get votes? With people. Jim Jones could produce 3,000 people at a political event.''
Normal humans show emotion every day, rather it is being concerned for ones worth or being happy or sad. Emotions are key aspect in classifying one as human.
More often, though, Babel tackles emotion indirectly, giving us a character’s mental state through the diction and syntax of a description or an action. In “The Sun of Italy,” the narrator tells us: “The naked brilliance of the
When talking about emotion it seems a fairly simple topic and immediately "feeling" words come to mind; sad, happy, and confused. These are basic emotions and easy to understand. What isn't so simple about emotions is their process and how they form and work. Emotions are reactions to sensory information like sight, smell, taste, touch and sound (Tracing Emotion’s Pathways 94). However, it is not that simple; an emotional reaction or response is made aware of and understood by a part of the brain called the sensory cortex. These emotional responses or reactions to sensory stimuli are processed by a part of the brain called the amygdala (What’s An Emotion). The amygdala is a huge asset to the cognitive factors of emotions because in processing emotions you become able to understand, recognize, and control them. So then how do emotions evoke a physiological reaction such as tearing up when one feels sad, laughing with joy, and trembling with fear? These physiological reactions that one may experience come from the autonomic nervous system. The autonomic nervous system is, “a collection of fibers that extend throughout