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Full Description
The book delves into the analysis of anger as both a moral and amoral emotion. It investigates whether anger is indeed one of the basic emotions or if it is a social and linguistic construct, denoting a concept associated with the human mind. The author subjects the concept of anger to an analysis of its semantic domains, as well as a conceptual analysis regarding what it signifies and means to us. Anger is analyzed from philosophical-phenomenological perspectives, as well as from the viewpoints of cognitive sciences, evolutionary psychology, and social psychology. The significance of anger in both phylogenetic and ontogenetic development is explored. Through a deeper understanding thereof, avenues toward its better and more effective management are elucidated.
Contents
Foreword - Instead of an Introduction - What Does the Concept of Anger Denote in Natural Languages? - Cognitive View of Anger (Reflections on the Meta-Analysis by Sorella, and Grecucci) - Anger as a Subjectively Experienced Feeling/Emotion (Inspired by Paul Ekman) - Anger as a Social and Moral Emotion (Inspired by the Original Text) - If Heidegger Had Written about Anger, or What Heidegger's Philosophy of Affectivity Offers. (Reflections on a Manuscript That Was Never Written) - Anger and Art (Cabanel's Fallen Angel and Shakespeare's Tamora) -God's Anger or the Anger of Gods? (Some Reflections on Homeric and Biblical Anger) - Anger as an Egocentric and Amoral Emotion (with a Note from Jessie Prinz) - Anger as a Social Emotion (Notes on Agnes Callard) - Anger and Forgiveness (Inspired by Martha Nussbaum) - Anger and Education or Some Notes on Owen Flanagan's "How to Do Things with Emotions: The Morality of Anger and Shame across Cultures" - Without Anger? A Few Reflections Instead of a Conclusion - References