There are a number of different models of basic emotions but for "we all experience" the best model is probably that based in universal facial expressions research:
Fear, anger, surprise, disgust, happiness, and sadness.
Personally, I favor the models with pairs since emotions feal like they clearly follow a gradient (different degrees of each emotion can be experience) which gives you:
Fear - anger
Surprise - anticipation
Trust - disgust
Happiness - sadness
Some basic emotions we all experience are happiness, sadness, fear, anger, surprise, and disgust. These emotions are considered universal across cultures and are part of the human experience.
There are six basic emotions that humans commonly experience: happiness, sadness, anger, fear, disgust, and surprise. These emotions are believed to be universal across all cultures and are expressed through similar facial expressions.
Yes, all people are born with the capacity for emotions. Emotions are fundamental to human experience and play a crucial role in both social interactions and decision-making. Each individual's emotional experience may vary based on genetic, environmental, and social factors.
Not all women are always emotional. Women, like men, can experience a range of emotions depending on the situation and their individual personality. Emotions are a natural part of being human, and both men and women have the capacity to feel and express emotions.
Yes, all emotions are valuable because they provide important information about our experiences and guide our behavior and decision-making. It's important to acknowledge and understand our emotions in order to effectively manage them and respond in a healthy way to various situations.
Yes, happiness, sadness, anger, and fear are all examples of basic human emotions. These emotions play a crucial role in our lives and help us navigate and respond to different situations and experiences.
Absolutely nothing. We all experience different emotions throughout the day.
Yes, all the time in fact.
Because they are a new parents and they dnt really get all the things that children do.
Yes, all emotions are valuable because they provide important information about our experiences and guide our behavior and decision-making. It's important to acknowledge and understand our emotions in order to effectively manage them and respond in a healthy way to various situations.
Yes, all people are born with the capacity for emotions. Emotions are fundamental to human experience and play a crucial role in both social interactions and decision-making. Each individual's emotional experience may vary based on genetic, environmental, and social factors.
A widespread assumption in theories of emotion is that there exists a small set of basic emotions. From a biological perspective, this idea is manifested in the belief that there might be neurophysiological and anatomical substrates corresponding to the basic emotions. From a psychological perspective, basic emotions are often held to be the primitive building blocks of other, nonbasic emotions. The content of such claims is examined, and the results suggest that there is no coherent nontrivial notion of basic emotions as the elementary psychological primitives in terms of which other emotions can be explained. Thus, the view that there exist basic emotions out of which all other emotions are built, and in terms of which they can be explained, is questioned, raising the possibility that this position is an article of faith rather than an empirically or theoretically defensible basis for the conduct of emotion research. This suggests that perhaps the notion of basic emotions will not lead to significant progress in the field. An alternative approach to explaining the phenomena that appear to motivate the postulation of basic emotions is presented. One of the most ubiquitous notions in the emotion literature is that some emotions have a special status. These privileged emotions are usually called basic, primary, or fundamental emotions. For several contemporary theorists, the idea that there exists a small set of basic emotions is central to their theories (e.g., Izard, 1977; Oatley & Johnson-Laird, 1987; Plutchik, 1962, 1980; Tomkins, 1962, 1963, 1984). Yet, although they and many others share the view that some emotions are basic, there is little agreement about how many emotions are basic, which emotions are basic, and why they are basic. Table 1 summarizes the proposals of a representative set of emotion theorists who hold (or held) some sort of basic-emotion position. As the table shows, some emotion theorists have proposed as few as two basic emotions. For example, Mowrer (1960) proposed just pleasure and pain as the basic emotional states, the onset and offset of which are related to hope, fear, disappointment, and relief. Watson (1930) included only 1 of these, fear, in his 3 basic emotions of fear, love, and rage. More recently, Panksepp (1982) has proposed 4 basic emotions, expectancy, fear, rage, and panic; Kemper (1987) has proposed fear, anger, depression, and satisfaction; and Oatley and Johnson-Laird (1987) base their theory on the primacy of happiness, sadness, anxiety, anger, and disgust. At the other end of the scale, Frijda (1986) identified 18 basic emotions, including arrogance, humility, and indifference, as well as more commonplace examples, such as anger, fear, and sorrow; however, on other occasions (personal communication, September 8, 1986), he proposed only 6 basic emotions and in one article (Frijda, 1987) he Preparation of this article was supported in part by grants from the National Science Foundation, BNS 8318077 and BNS 8721853. We thank Gerald Clore, Nico Frijda, Jeffrey Gray, Phoebe Ellsworth, Philip Johnson-Laird, John Teasdale, and Fraser Watts for their helpful comments on drafts of this article. Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Andrew Ortony, Institute for the Learning Sciences, Northwestern University, 1890 Maple Avenue, Evanston, Illinois 60201. seemed to argue for
The dream reflects the dreamer's emotions regarding the cousin, perhaps including some fear and regret regarding their relationship. The dream provides no information at all about the deceased cousin's thoughts, emotions or experience.
Are the basic ways of expressing emotions innate in all children the world over? Just as the question, individual words, and reflection to what is being asked are all homologously ontological and origin etymological in individual perspective. My gray area is saying yes due to our all being on the same evolutionary plateau. A smile is universal.
I am designed to provide information and assistance based on data and algorithms, rather than personal emotions. My goal is to be helpful and reliable in providing accurate and consistent responses.
Yes, Some experience morning sickness all the way through the pregnancy, some experience just nausea some don't experience it at all, some are unlucky enough to experience it all day everyday. Every pregnancy is different.
All people have emotions. Some are just more open and honest about it.
12 my friend and i think that you should at least be 14 that way you have a little more experience with the whole dating thing