William James and emotion: is a century of fame worth a century of misunderstanding?

During his lifetime William James's complex ideas about emotion were oversimplified to the point of caricature, and for the next half century scientific research on emotion was driven by the oversimplified version--by the idea that emotions are merely the sensation of bodily changes. In fact, the interpretation of the stimulus was an essential feature of James's ideas, but one that seemed so obvious that it did not require explanation. Three damaging scientific consequences of the mischaracterization of James's views were (a) the nearly exclusive focus on bodily process, (b) the reification of emotions as entities rather than processes, and (c) the linear thinking produced by the concern with the sequence of affect, interpretation, and bodily response.

[1]  Ward M. Winton The role of facial response in self-reports of emotion: a critique of Laird , 1986 .

[2]  Joseph E LeDoux Cognitive-Emotional Interactions in the Brain , 1989 .

[3]  W. James The Physical Basis of Emotion. , 1994 .

[4]  J. Singer,et al.  Cognitive, social, and physiological determinants of emotional state. , 1962, Psychological review.

[5]  P. Ekman Expression and the Nature of Emotion , 1984 .

[6]  Craig A. Smith,et al.  Patterns of cognitive appraisal in emotion. , 1985, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[7]  R. Descartes,et al.  The passions of the soul , 1989 .

[8]  J. Russell A circumplex model of affect. , 1980 .

[9]  B. Weiner An attributional theory of achievement motivation and emotion. , 1985, Psychological review.

[10]  Ward M. Winton Jamesian Aspects of Misattribution Research , 1990 .

[11]  P. Ellsworth,et al.  The role of facial response in the experience of emotion. , 1979, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[12]  B. Jaffe Cognitive Therapy and the Emotional Disorders , 1977 .

[13]  S. Tomkins,et al.  What and Where are the Primary Affects? Some Evidence for a Theory , 1964, Perceptual and motor skills.

[14]  Carroll E. Izard,et al.  The Substrates and Functions of Emotion Feelings , 1990 .

[15]  R. Zajonc Feeling and thinking : Preferences need no inferences , 1980 .

[16]  Ira J. Roseman Cognitive determinants of emotion: A structural theory. , 1984 .

[17]  R. Zajonc,et al.  Facial efference and the experience of emotion. , 1989, Annual review of psychology.

[18]  E. Gellhorn MOTION AND EMOTION: THE ROLE OF PROPRIOCEPTION IN THE PHYSIOLOGY AND PATHOLOGY OF THE EMOTIONS. , 1964, Psychological review.

[19]  M. Posner,et al.  Attentional Mechanisms and Conscious Experience , 1992 .

[20]  C. Landis Studies of Emotional Reactions. II. General Behavior and Facial Expression. , 1924 .

[21]  J. Stainer,et al.  The Emotions , 1882, Nature.

[22]  J. Laird,et al.  William James and the Mechanisms of Emotional Experience , 1990 .

[23]  N. Bull The attitude theory of emotion. , 1951, International record of medicine and general practice clinics.

[24]  R. Zajonc,et al.  Feeling and facial efference: implications of the vascular theory of emotion. , 1989, Psychological review.

[25]  R. Zajonc,et al.  Affect, cognition, and awareness: affective priming with optimal and suboptimal stimulus exposures. , 1993, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[26]  Bruce Bowe The Face of Emotion , 1985 .

[27]  Phoebe C. Ellsworth,et al.  Sense, culture, and sensibility. , 1994 .

[28]  C A Smith Dimensions of appraisal and physiological response in emotion. , 1989, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[29]  M. Posner,et al.  The attention system of the human brain. , 1990, Annual review of neuroscience.

[30]  Andrew Ortony,et al.  The Cognitive Structure of Emotions , 1988 .

[31]  M. Sherman The differentiation of emotional responses in infants. , 1928 .

[32]  Talks To Teachers On Psychology , 2019 .

[33]  M. Sherman The differentiation of emotional responses in infants. I. Judgments of emotional responses from motion picture views and from actual observation. , 1927 .