Three brilliant lectures by Lisa Feldman Barrett with many, for me, new insights. I only miss the distinction between people and animals. Being able to observe the concepts placed in our model of reality and manipulate them. This allows us to think in metaphors.
Only vertebrates have adaptable immune systems - the subtitle incorrect (I was stumbling over my words but I was saying that "In vertebrates, immune systems learn and so they're adaptable." Invertebrates do not have an adaptable immune system.
Excelente trabajo, vengo siguiendo la teoría de las emociones construidas desde el año 2018 después de leer la "La vida secreta del cerebro", y realicé mi tesis doctoral en filosofía sobre las condiciones históricas que permiten la aparición del discurso científico de las emociones construidas.
The first belief is a strawman! People expressing 'unexpected' facial expressions or not expressing emotions on their faces when they're expected to do so does not refute anything; it merely points to the fact that humans can supress their facial expressions or modify them to fit in or obey the rules of the social environment they're in: e.g a child may not express anger on their face perhaps because it may be frawed upon to do so.
Three brilliant lectures by Lisa Feldman Barrett with many, for me, new insights. I only miss the distinction between people and animals. Being able to observe the concepts placed in our model of reality and manipulate them. This allows us to think in metaphors.
Only vertebrates have adaptable immune systems - the subtitle incorrect (I was stumbling over my words but I was saying that "In vertebrates, immune systems learn and so they're adaptable." Invertebrates do not have an adaptable immune system.
Excelente trabajo, vengo siguiendo la teoría de las emociones construidas desde el año 2018 después de leer la "La vida secreta del cerebro", y realicé mi tesis doctoral en filosofía sobre las condiciones históricas que permiten la aparición del discurso científico de las emociones construidas.
The first belief is a strawman! People expressing 'unexpected' facial expressions or not expressing emotions on their faces when they're expected to do so does not refute anything; it merely points to the fact that humans can supress their facial expressions or modify them to fit in or obey the rules of the social environment they're in: e.g a child may not express anger on their face perhaps because it may be frawed upon to do so.