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  1. The entire fund and capital of the emotion here is the senseless bodily effect the blades immediately arouse. This case is typical of a class: where an ideal emotion seems to precede …

  2. Most psychologists would agree that an emotion is a complex pattern of changes that include physiological arousal, subjective feelings, cognitive processes and behavioural reactions, all in …

  3. This can be done through the exercises on pages 11 and 12 (Emotion Diary, Mindfulness of My Emotions). In these exercises, identify and evaluate your emotional responses to a situation.

  4. Ask students: How does our body feel when we are feeling that emotion? What does our face look like? Can you share an example of when you felt that emotion? Have students draw a picture …

  5. There are reasons why we have emotions. We need them! Lack of skills, reinforcing consequences, moodiness, rumination/ worrying, myths about emotions, and biology can …

  6. Here, we address this gap by integrating evidence from social-personality, clinical, cognitive-neuroscience, and animal research to highlight the role of sensation as a tool that can be …

  7. Researchers have argued for years over what the "primary emotions" are considered. The emotions highest on the list include anger, sadness, fear, happiness, love, surprise, disgust, …