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Journal ArticleDOI

Emotions and the Problem of Other Minds

Hanna Pickard
- 01 Mar 2003 - 
- Vol. 52, Iss: 52, pp 87-103
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TLDR
In this article, the authors consider the nature of the problem of other minds and show how emotions can help to solve the problem, and how to use emotions to solve it. But what does this demand amount to, and do emotions actually meet it?
Abstract
Can consideration of the emotions help to solve the problem of other minds? Intuitively, it should. We often think of emotions as public: as observable in the body, face, and voice of others. Perhaps you can simply see another's disgust or anger, say, in her demeanour and expression; or hear the sadness clearly in his voice. Publicity of mind, meanwhile, is just what is demanded by some solutions to the problem. But what does this demand amount to, and do emotions actually meet it? This paper has three parts. First, I consider the nature of the problem of other minds. Second, I consider the publicity of emotions. And third, I bring these together to show how emotions can help to solve the problem. Traditionally, there are two problems of other minds: one epistemological, one conceptual. The epistemological problem asks how you can know, or how you can be justified in believing, that another person has a mind at all: that there exist other subjects of experience. The conceptual problem asks how you can so much as understand that there could exist other minds or subjects of experience: how you can have the concept of another's mind or experience. But why suppose these problems exist? They both arise, in part, from the same idea. This is the idea of an ontological distinction between experience (mind) and behaviour (body): they are not the same type of thing. The idea is intuitive. Consider, for instance, the possibility of pretence. Another person may be carrying on as if in pain, say, grimacing and crying out, but not be in pain at all.

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Seeing mind in action

TL;DR: The authors defend the view that at least some mental states and processes are at times visible, capable of being directly perceived by others, and further argue that this view receives robust support from several strands of empirical research.
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The rainbow of emotions: at the crossroads of neurobiology and phenomenology

TL;DR: In this paper, a heart-centered model is proposed for the explanatory gap between the mind-body and Leib/Korper problems, with a subjective (qua intersubjective) point of view.
Reference EntryDOI

Direct Social Perception

TL;DR: The authors consider a version of DSP that draws upon phenomenology, 4E cognition, and empirical work in cognitive science and conclude that embodied expressions of emotions (e.g., facial expressions, gestures) may constitute part of the emotion itself.
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Propositional attitude, affective attitude and irony comprehension

TL;DR: In this article, the EMO-FUNDETT research project, a coordinate project funded by the Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (FFI2013-47792-C2-1-P), was used to support the Spanish National Statistics Institute.
References
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Book

The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals

TL;DR: The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals Introduction to the First Edition and Discussion Index, by Phillip Prodger and Paul Ekman.
Journal ArticleDOI

An argument for basic emotions

TL;DR: This work has shown that not only the intensity of an emotion but also its direction may vary greatly both in the amygdala and in the brain during the course of emotion regulation.
Book

The varieties of reference

TL;DR: Gareth Evans, one of the most brilliant philosophers of his generation, died in 1980 at the age of thirty-four, and had been working for many years on a book about reference, but did not complete it before his death.