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Panksepp Jaak, Biven Lucy. The Archaeology of Mind: Neuroevolutionary Origins of Human Emotions

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Panksepp Jaak, Biven Lucy. The Archaeology of Mind: Neuroevolutionary Origins of Human Emotions
New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2012. — 592 p.
What makes us happy? What makes us sad? How do we come to feel a sense of enthusiasm? What fills us with lust, anger, fear, or tenderness? Traditional behavioral and cognitive neuroscience have yet to provide satisfactory answers. The Archaeology of Mind presents an affective neuroscience approach which takes into consideration basic mental processes, brain functions, and emotional behaviors that all mammals share to locate the neural mechanisms of emotional expression. It reveals for the first time the deep neural sources of our values and basic emotional feelings.
This book elaborates on the seven emotional systems that explain how we live and behave. These systems originate in deep areas of the brain that are remarkably similar across all mammalian species. When they are disrupted, we find the origins of emotional disorders:
Seeking: how the brain generates a euphoric and expectant response
Fear: how the brain responds to the threat of physical danger and death
Rage: sources of irritation and fury in the brain
Lust: how sexual desire and attachments are elaborated in the brain
Care: sources of maternal nurturance
Grief: sources of non-sexual attachments
Play: how the brain generates joyous, rough-and-tumble interactions
Self: a hypothesis explaining how affects might be elaborated in the brain
The book offers an evidence-based evolutionary taxonomy of emotions and affects and, as such, a brand-new clinical paradigm for treating psychiatric disorders in clinical practice.
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