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- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!warwick!uknet!acorn!abienek
- From: abienek@acorn.co.uk (Alex Bienek)
- Newsgroups: alt.angst
- Subject: Re: Books & MY New Year's
- Message-ID: <21117@acorn.co.uk>
- Date: 21 Jan 93 14:43:45 GMT
- References: <1jepkuINNnpu@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu>
- Sender: abienek@acorn.co.uk
- Organization: Acorn Computers Ltd, Cambridge, England
- Lines: 36
-
- In article <1jepkuINNnpu@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu> bs584@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Jeanne Leidy) writes:
-
- >An interesting theory, but I remain sceptical. Choose some emotions other
- >than love -- grief, for example. In what way is grief utilitarian?
- >
- >
- >-Jeanne
-
- One possibility is that emotions are merely unwanted side effects of
- the process of survival, a basic animal instinct.
-
- Although we generally abhor routine I think it is vital to our
- survival. Without routine we become disorientated and confused,
- our bodies don't function well and we become unproductive.
- So we build our routines, where we live, when we eat, when we sleep,
- where we work, when we work, and these routines in turn guide us
- through a productive (in terms of physical survival and reproduction)
- existence.
- Unfortunately once the routines have been established we find it very
- difficult to break out of them. If some external event causes our
- routine to be broken we may well feel an emotion such as grief or
- anger. This emotion does not help our basic survival instinct, in fact
- it can often hinder it by preventing us from forming new routines
- as quickly as we otherwise might.
- I can't believe such emotional responses are taught by society and
- it is not unreasonable to suppose that changes in behaviour could
- have unwanted side effects in the brain.
-
- A pet theory that I have is that sentimentality towards our
- routines is a major obstacle to our progression. This can be seen as
- a good thing and a bad thing. Maximum success for a human being (whatever
- that may mean) would be achieved if that human were simply able to
- cast aside that which was no longer of use and move on. Real people,
- however, are weighed down by a lifetimes physical and emotional refuse.
-
- Alex.
-