19 May 2015 , 18:30 - 20:00

Mind-Brain Lecture: Andrea Scarantino (Georgia)

“Emotional action between automaticity and control”

Emotional action has recently attracted the attention of both philosophers and scientists, even though the two literatures on emotional action have barely overlapped. Philosophers have debated mostly arational emotional actions (Hursthouse 1991), namely “weird” emotional actions like rolling around in one’s dead wife’s clothes out of grief or kicking a door out of anger. The key philosophical question has been: can arational actions be explained in terms of the Humean theory of motivation, i.e. in terms of belief and desire pairs? Scientists have instead debated emotional action more generally, focusing in particular on the causal connection between emotions and actions. The two key scientific questions have been: Are emotional actions caused by emotions? If so, which model of emotion-action causation is most suitable? In this talk, I will argue that neither philosophical nor scientific models are suitable, because they, respectively, overestimate and underestimate the level of control involved in emotional actions. I will present a new theory of emotional actions in conclusion, largely inspired by Nico Frjida’s seminal work. Andrea Scarantino, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy, Georgia State University This talk is organized by the Einstein Group "Consciousness, Emotions, and Values" (Professor Jesse Prinz).

 

Contact:

Dr. Joerg Fingerhut

 

Location:

Berlin School of Mind and Brain

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

Luisenstraße 56

Room 144 (ground floor)

10117 Berlin