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On Theories About the Nature of Emotion

Authors :
Lewis, Michael
Lewis, Benjamin G
Source :
Lewis, Michael; & Lewis, Benjamin G. (1991). On Theories About the Nature of Emotion. International Journal of Comparative Psychology, 5(2). Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/07s6r35d
Publication Year :
1991
Publisher :
California Digital Library (CDL), 1991.

Abstract

Professor Salzen presents us with his theory of emotion. At the outsetof his essay he tells us two things of importance for understanding whatis to follow. First, he asks, "Why add another grand theory of emotion?"His answer is that "the very multiplicity of theories suggest that nonehas a central point of view or a deductive or generative principle thatprovides a satisfactory or complete explanation of the phenomena ofemotion" (p. 47), We have some difficulty with such an assertion sincemultiplicity of theories do not, on scientific grounds, mean none arenecessarily satisfactory. An understanding of the property of light requiresat least two theories that happen to have the feature that if oneis true, the other is not. Wave and particle theories of light both serveto explain features of phenomena, and physics does quite well with multipleexplanation, even contradictory ones

Details

ISSN :
21683344 and 08893667
Volume :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Comparative Psychology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....43d76e9396043d7e68105438bfdfb63b