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Richard Firth-Godbehere

A Human History of Emotion

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  • b2601497554has quoted10 days ago
    and that’s mostly because of the dominance of English-language psychology journals.
  • b2601497554has quoted10 days ago
    According to these passages, God is deeply emotional.
  • b2601497554has quoted10 days ago
    one aspect of his story that is often overlooked is the fact that he successfully merged the way the Hebrews understood their feelings with the way the Greeks understood theirs.
  • b2601497554has quoted15 days ago
    Despite their superficial differences, there are many similarities between the ancient Greek and ancient Indian conceptions of emotion. Both see pleasure and pain as crucial. Both say that desire can be dangerous, and both believe that it must be controlled. Both suggest that thoughts and feelings are usually intertwined, as are actions and perceptions of the world. Of course, both these ancient views of emotion are quite different from the way we understand emotion today.
  • b2601497554has quoted15 days ago
    Avoiding sorrow by sticking to his path only seemed to cause more sorrow.
  • b2601497554has quoted15 days ago
    Is it possible to have control over your body, senses, feelings, thoughts, and consciousness?
  • b2601497554has quoted15 days ago
    After three days and nights under that tree, Gautama achieved that same childhood state of enlightenment: nirvana.
  • b2601497554has quoted17 days ago
    Artha is a desire for things; dharma is the desire to follow your path, regardless of things.
  • b2601497554has quoted17 days ago
    It contains, for example, advice on consolidating your power by predicting someone’s death just before that person is mysteriously executed—by you—thus proving that you can see into the future.
  • b2601497554has quoted17 days ago
    By the way, when I use the word desire, I also mean things that are found under that word in a thesaurus—need, want, appetite, longing, craving, yearning, wish, aspiring, hankering, and so on—partly because it stops me from unnecessarily overcomplicating things but mostly because people throughout history didn’t often differentiate between their desires and needs, either.
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