01573nam 2200433 450 00001436620050818155534.020030619d1965----km-y0itay0103----baitaITTra riformismo illuminato e dispotismo napoleonicoesperienze del cittadino americano Filippo MazzeiSara Tognetti Burigana1 0001753RomaEdizioni di storia e letteratura1965127 p.25 cm.Politica e storia11Con appendice di documenti e testi2001Politica e storia11Mazzei,FilippoIlluminismo320.1(21. ed.)Scienza politica. Lo StatoTognetti Burigana,Sara210456Mazzei,FilippoITUniversità della Basilicata - B.I.A.RICAunimarc000014366Tra riformismo illuminato e dispotismo napoleonico79990UNIBASMONLETLETTERESTD0230120030619BAS01142420050601BAS011755batch0120050718BAS01105220050718BAS01111120050718BAS01114120050718BAS011155MDL3020050818BAS011555BATCH0020070503BAS011731ATR4020100708BAS011214BAS01BAS01BOOKBASA1Polo Storico-UmanisticoGENCollezione generaleFM/9230992309L923092003061902Prestabile Generale05416nam 2200649Ia 450 991097225880332120200520144314.09786612156830978128215683812821568379789027294555902729455010.1075/aicr.61(CKB)1000000000534988(OCoLC)70774144(CaPaEBR)ebrary10080016(MiAaPQ)EBC622414(DE-B1597)720598(DE-B1597)9789027294555(EXLCZ)99100000000053498820041207d2005 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierCurious emotions roots of consciousness and personality in motivated action /Ralph D. Ellis1st ed.Amsterdam ;Philadelphia, PA J. Benjamins Pub.20051 online resource (248 p.) Advances in consciousness research,1381-589X ;v. 619781588116284 158811628X 9789027251978 9027251975 Includes bibliographical references and index.Curious Emotions -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Introduction -- 1. The enactive approach to affective intentionality -- 2. Some preliminary predictions of enactivism -- 3. The "curious" emotions -- 4. Conceptualizing action versus reaction -- 5. Plan of the book -- 1. Preconscious emotional intentionality -- 1. Motivation, conscious emotion, and unconscious emotion -- 2. The murkiness of emotional intentionality -- 3. Aims, objects, triggers, and symbolization-vehicles -- 4. The roles of sensation, interoception, and sensorimotor action imagery -- 2. Motivated attention in action -- 1. Linear versus dynamical causal sequences in the brain -- 2. Conflicting theories with conflicting empirical predictions -- 3. The P300 ERP as an operational definition of perceptual consciousness -- 4. How the Mack and Rock data relate to the two types of hypotheses -- 5. The paradox of early and late selection -- 6. Attention and conscious processing -- 7. Further implications for the problems of attention and consciousness -- 3. Non-consummatory motivations -- 1. Intertheoretic reduction and consummatory-drive reductionism -- 2. The notion of "extropy": A non-reductive force? -- 3. The humanistic notion of "life wish" -- 4. A possible synthesis -- 4. Homeostasis, extropy, and boundary needs as grounding specific emotions -- 1. Physiological evidence for non-consummatory motivation -- 2. Novelty, constraints to freedom, and the action-consciousness connection -- 3. The importance of extropy needs in higher mammals -- 4. Existential requirements for an adequate dynamical theory of emotion -- 5. Toward an integrated physiological and phenomenological account -- 5. Varieties of extended self and personality -- 1. How emotion grounds the various senses of self -- 2. Why not an illusory-choice model?.3. The embodied self and the personality -- 4. How can there be knowledge of the self? -- 6. Learning about emotions through the arts -- 1. An enactive dance form for the eye -- 2. Why does art move, and not just entertain? -- 3. Love and other non-consummatory motivations -- 7. Dynamical systems and emotional agency -- 1. The causal power of dynamical systems -- 2. How can top-down systems avoid violating causal closure? -- 3. The emotional brain as an enactive system -- 4. Objections and responses -- Conclusion -- References -- Index -- The series Advances in Consciousness Research.Emotion drives all cognitive processes, largely determining their qualitative feel, their structure, and in part even their content. Action-initiating centers deep in the emotional brain ground our understanding of the world by enabling us to imagine how we could act relative to it, based on endogenous motivations to engage certain levels of energy and complexity. Thus understanding personality, cognition, consciousness and action requires examining the workings of dynamical systems applied to emotional processes in living organisms. If an object's meaning depends on its action affordances, then understanding intentionality in emotion or cognition requires exploring why emotion is the bridge between action and representational processes such as thought or imagery; and this requires integrating phenomenology with neurophysiology. The resulting viewpoint, "enactivism," entails specific new predictions, and suggests that emotions are about the self-initiated actions of dynamical systems, not reactive "responses" to external events; consciousness is more about motivated anticipation than reaction to inputs. (Series A).Advances in consciousness research ;v. 61.ConsciousnessEmotionsMotivation (Psychology)Self-organizing systemsConsciousness.Emotions.Motivation (Psychology)Self-organizing systems.152.4Ellis Ralph D615426MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910972258803321Curious emotions1084046UNINA