Concerns and the Seriousness of Emotion

Dialectica 71 (2):181-207 (2017)
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Abstract

Some philosophers have claimed that emotions are states of mind where an object is taken seriously. Seriousness, as this paper understands it, involves both a phenomenological change in attention and non-indifference towards an object. The paper investigates how contemporary theories of emotion can explain the seriousness of emotion. After rejecting explanations based on feeling, desire, and concern, the paper argues that the seriousness of an emotion can be explained as the manifestation of a concern in an outwardly directed feeling. Given the lack of competing explanations, seriousness probably must be explained this way. This argument shows how emotional feelings constitutively depend on desires, and why desires are essential ingredients to emotion.

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Author's Profile

John M. Monteleone
Le Moyne College

Citations of this work

Emotional Depth.John M. Monteleone - 2018 - Philosophical Quarterly 68 (273):779-800.

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What we owe to each other.Thomas Scanlon - 1998 - Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
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Mortal Questions.Thomas Nagel - 1983 - Religious Studies 19 (1):96-99.
The Toxin Puzzle.Gregory S. Kavka - 1983 - Analysis 43 (1):33-36.

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