In:Consciousness & Emotion: Agency, conscious choice, and selective perception
Edited by Ralph D. Ellis and Natika Newton
[Consciousness & Emotion Book Series 1] 2005
► pp. v–viii
Get fulltext
This article is available free of charge.
Published online: 18 March 2005
https://doi.org/10.1075/ceb.1.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/ceb.1.toc
Table of contents
Introduction
I. EMOTIONAL INFLUENCES ON PERCEPTION AND THOUGHT
Subjective prerequisites for the construction of an objective world
Energetic effects of emotions on cognitions: Complementary psychobiological and psychosocial findings
Negative affective states’ effects on perception of affective pictures
Neural development: Affective and immune system influences
Consciousness, emotion and face: An event-related potentials study
Phenomenal consciousness, sense impressions, and the logic of “what it’s like”
II. AGENCY AND CHOICE
Exposing the covert agent
Doing it and Meaning it: And the Relationship Between the Two
Anticipatory consciousness, Libet’s veto, and a close-enough theory of free will
Freud’s phenomenology of the emotions
Verbal expressions of self and emotions: A taxonomy with implications for Alexithymia and related disorders
III. AGENCY AND MORAL VALUE
Apt affect: Moral concept mastery and the phenomenology of emotions
The Varieties of Religious Experience considered from the perspective of James’s account of the stream of consciousness
Index327
