Healing the Reason-Emotion Split
Proposal review
Scarecrows, Tin Woodmen, and the Wizard
Abstract
Healing the Reason-Emotion Split draws on research from experimental psychology and neuroscience to dispel the myth that reason should be heralded above emotion.
Arguing that reason and emotion mutually benefit our decision-making abilities, the book explores the idea that understanding this relationship could have long-term advantages for our management of society’s biggest problems. Levine reviews how reason and emotion operated in historical movements such as the Enlightenment, Romanticism and 1960s' counterculture, to conclude that a successful society would restore human connection and foster compassion in economics and politics by equally utilizing reason and emotion.
Integrating discussion on classic and contemporary neurological studies and using allegory, the book lays out the potential for societal change through compassion, and would be of interest to psychologists concerned with social implications of their fields, philosophy students, social activists, and religious leaders.
Keywords
Reasoning;Emotion;Decision-Making;Empathy;Rationality;Phenomenon Attentional Blink;Romanticism;Prairie Vole;Reason–emotion split;Attentional Blink;Decision-making abilities;Free Documentation License;Neuroscience;Vice Versa;Dark Triad;Ventromedial Prefrontal Cortex;Orbitofrontal Cortex;Scarecrows;High NFC Individual;Partnership Interactions;Female Prairie Voles;Cognitive Empathy;Triune Brain Theory;Montane Vole;Steam;National Academies;Somatic Marker Hypothesis;Bonnet MacaquesDOI
10.4324/9781003014348ISBN
9781000334180, 9781000334296, 9780367856847, 9781003014348, 9780367856830, 9781000334074Publisher
Taylor & FrancisPublisher website
https://taylorandfrancis.com/Publication date and place
2021Imprint
RoutledgeClassification
Psycholinguistics and cognitive linguistics
Medical counselling
Philosophy of mind
Psychotherapy
Psychoanalytical and Freudian psychology
Psychology: emotions
Cognition and cognitive psychology