Available Formats
Evolved Emotions: An Interdisciplinary and Functional Analysis
By (Author) Glenn Weisfeld
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
18th November 2021
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
128.37
Paperback
422
Width 154mm, Height 219mm, Spine 31mm
626g
In Evolved Emotions, Glenn Weisfeld analyzes a comprehensive list of universal emotions, detailing their elicitors, affects, behavioral tendencies, expressions, visceral changes, neural mediations, development over the life span, and presence in other species. This comparative, evolutionary perspective inspires respect for the ancient utility of our emotions and the specific, enduring adaptive value of each one. This book offers novel insights into neglected emotional behaviors such as contact comfort, pain, feeding, disgust, fatigue, sleep, play, amorousness, sex, grief, parental behavior, anger, pride and shame, and humor. This systematic study of universal human emotions offers a framework for understanding all voluntary human behavior, including developmental, personality, gender, and pathological differences, explaining how each normal emotion serves to enhance the biological fitness of the individual.
This detailed look at the panoply of human and non-human emotions takes an explicitly evolutionary approach to understanding emotions in many different arenas of human experience. This makes sense because the author is an evolutionary psychologist and ethologist who has published widely on a variety of subjects centered around adolescence, marriage and sexuality, and power hierarchies, often from a cross-cultural perspective. Weisfeld (Wayne State Univ.) is author or coeditor of numerous books including Psychology of Marriage: An Evolutionary and Cross-Cultural View (CH, Nov'18, 56-1297). In this quite readable and accessible volume, he first outlines his evolutionary approach to the study of emotions, then offers an account of the physiological and neurophysiological underpinnings of emotion, describing what he considers to be all of the basic emotions and their evolutionary functions. This account is similar to but much broader than Paul Ekman's (Emotions Revealed, 2003). . . It is. . . a pleasure to read so far-ranging a survey of emotions from one so erudite.
Summing Up: Recommended. All readers.
Glenn Weisfeld is professor of psychology at Wayne State University