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The Lost Emotion By Mohamed Tohami





The Lost Emotion

Discover The World's Most Wanted and Only Emotion That Can Make You ALIVE!

Here is a sample of what you're going to discover in this report:

- The Decision Guaranteed to Change Your Life Forever!

- Education vs. Passion - Which Should Win?

- Why Problems Don't Matter

- A Gem of Wisdom


- Two Universal Laws That Can Make You the Wealthiest Man Alive Today!

- How to Reach Your Full Personal Power?

- What Is the Only True Success?

- How Can You Protect Yourself from the GREATEST Tragedy of Life?



 




Emotions

The Lost emotion free ebook

Emotions are evolutionary adaptations, as they enhance an organism's ability to experience and evaluate its environment and thus increase its likelihood to survive and reproduce, by providing the simplest plans for evolutionary most common actions needed, such as approaching or avoiding (in)digestible objects, fighting for it with other organisms or running away if the other organism is too powerful (anger vs. fear), and forming or loosing cooperative ties based on reciprocal altruism (gladness vs. sadness) with other organisms. In addition, emotions serve important functions in animal communication (between or within species).

Despite that in many cultures emotions (passion) are contrasted with cognition (reason) as a source of motivation and decision making, modern psychological science recognizes that, in healthy animals and humans, an individual's emotion, cognition, and behavior have a certain degree of integration and also can influence reciprocally each other. Emotion is an affective state involving a high level of activation, visceral changes and strong feelings. Emotion is derived from the Latin verb "emoverse" meaning "to stir up" or "to move."

Modern views propose that emotions are brain states that quickly assign value or valence to outcomes, provide a simple plan for action, and prepare the body physiologically for appropriate action. Other examples of such preparation include, for example:

  • the increased heartbeat and perspiration as preparation for flight action (fear),
  • the freezing response of a rat in the presence of a cat (a simple plan to act dead and avoid being eaten), or
  • the extra muscle tension as preparation for fight action (anger).

When a bear is galloping toward you, the function of the fear is to prepare the body for the appropriate action (flight) instead of all the other things it could be doing (rounding out your grocery list).

When it comes to perception, you can spot an object more quickly if it is, say, a spider rather than a roll of tape. In the realm of memory, emotional events are laid down differently by a parallel memory system involving a brain area called the amygdala.