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Single Idea 4906

[filed under theme 18. Thought / A. Modes of Thought / 3. Emotions / a. Nature of emotions ]

Full Idea

Babies show emotion dramatically, but the areas of the brain that in adults are linked to the conscious experience of emotions are not active in newborn babies. Such emotions may therefore be unconscious.

Gist of Idea

Babies show highly emotional brain events, but may well be unaware of them

Source

Rita Carter (Mapping the Mind [1998], p. 19)

Book Ref

Carter,Rita: 'Mapping the Mind' [Phoenix 2000], p.19


A Reaction

Traditionally, 'unconscious emotion' is a contradiction, but I think we should accept this new evidence and rethink the nature of mind. Not only might emotion be non-conscious, but we should even consider that rational thinking could be too.


The 19 ideas from Rita Carter

Pain doesn't have one brain location, but is linked to attention and emotion [Carter,R]
Proper brains appear at seven weeks, and neonates have as many neurons as adults do [Carter,R]
Scans of brains doing similar tasks produce very similar patterns of activation [Carter,R]
Babies show highly emotional brain events, but may well be unaware of them [Carter,R]
Normal babies seem to have overlapping sense experiences [Carter,R]
The 'locus coeruleus' is one of several candidates for the brain's 'pleasure centre' [Carter,R]
The only way we can control our emotions is by manipulating the outside world that influences them [Carter,R]
No one knows if animals are conscious [Carter,R]
Sense organs don't discriminate; they reduce various inputs to the same electrical pulses [Carter,R]
The recognition sequence is: classify, name, locate, associate, feel [Carter,R, by PG]
Out-of-body experiences may be due to temporary loss of proprioception [Carter,R]
Brain lesions can erase whole categories of perception, suggesting they are hard-wired [Carter,R]
A frog will starve to death surrounded by dead flies [Carter,R]
In primates, brain size correlates closely with size of social group [Carter,R]
There is enormous evidence that consciousness arises in the frontal lobes of the brain [Carter,R]
Consciousness involves awareness, perception, self-awareness, attention and reflection [Carter,R]
In blindsight V1 (normal vision) is inactive, but V5 (movement) lights up [Carter,R]
There seems to be no dividing line between a memory and a thought [Carter,R]
Thinking takes place on the upper side of the prefrontal cortex [Carter,R]