Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2775911710> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 63 of
63
with 100 items per page.
- W2775911710 abstract "The sociology of emotion remains divided. One group of social scientistsadheres closely to positivism and formulates lengthy lists of abstractpropositions and predictions (Collins, Turner, Kemper, etc.). In contrast,the other group’s epistemology is enmeshed in interpretivism and producesthick-descriptions of emotion labels, scripts, and understandings(Hochschild, Katz, Wetherell, etc.). Neither positivist nor interpretivistapproaches adequately theorize the causal and conjunctural status of humanemotions in social-historical sequences; thus, they both fail to show how,why, and when accounts of emotional states may be necessary in socialexplanations. Critical realism (CR) offers a better way to conceptualizethe influence of the psychophysiological subsistence of emotion withinsocial interactions. A CR-inspired approach to the sociology of emotionshould include three insights: (1) *Emotions as Evolved Capabilities:* Fromour evolutionary prehistory, humans have inherited distinctive emotionalcapabilities, including a complex palette of emotional experience andimpressive emotional mechanisms for rapid-fire sublinguistic communication.(2) *Emotions as Emergent Causal Powers:* Human emotions are themselves‘emergent’ neurophenomenological entities belonging to themicrosociological domain of ontology. Emotional experiences emerge from butare not reducible to labels, bodies, gestures, minds, social situations,scripts, etc. Integrating these multicomponent ingredients, thepsychophysiological coherence of emotions indicates the existence ofemergent properties, including possibilities of upward and downwardcausation. (3) *Emotions as Situational Dispositions*: Emotions realizetheir causal power as psychological dispositions to action, inaction, andcommunication. By embracing critical realism, sociologists can avoid bothan upward conflation of emotion into higher-level social structures, likelanguage (an error of the interpretivists), as well as a downward reductionof the psychology of social emotion to neurobiology or behavioralism (anerror of the positivists)." @default.
- W2775911710 created "2018-01-05" @default.
- W2775911710 creator A5077462590 @default.
- W2775911710 date "2016-08-18" @default.
- W2775911710 modified "2023-09-24" @default.
- W2775911710 title "Emotions and Emergence" @default.
- W2775911710 doi "https://doi.org/10.31235/osf.io/fxha2" @default.
- W2775911710 hasPublicationYear "2016" @default.
- W2775911710 type Work @default.
- W2775911710 sameAs 2775911710 @default.
- W2775911710 citedByCount "1" @default.
- W2775911710 countsByYear W27759117102019 @default.
- W2775911710 crossrefType "posted-content" @default.
- W2775911710 hasAuthorship W2775911710A5077462590 @default.
- W2775911710 hasBestOaLocation W27759117102 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConcept C111472728 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConcept C128706718 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConcept C180747234 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConcept C189645446 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConcept C543847140 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConcept C77805123 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConcept C92150231 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConceptScore W2775911710C111472728 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConceptScore W2775911710C128706718 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConceptScore W2775911710C138885662 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConceptScore W2775911710C144024400 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConceptScore W2775911710C15744967 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConceptScore W2775911710C180747234 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConceptScore W2775911710C189645446 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConceptScore W2775911710C543847140 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConceptScore W2775911710C77805123 @default.
- W2775911710 hasConceptScore W2775911710C92150231 @default.
- W2775911710 hasLocation W27759117101 @default.
- W2775911710 hasLocation W27759117102 @default.
- W2775911710 hasOpenAccess W2775911710 @default.
- W2775911710 hasPrimaryLocation W27759117101 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W1414517970 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W1533552443 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W1578574134 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W1979177824 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W2038505150 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W2048886978 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W2242335483 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W2288904289 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W2479216337 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W2479540381 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W2495229158 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W2518937514 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W2519121083 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W2523651173 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W2562221121 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W2797986037 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W2892940893 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W2905198807 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W2982407158 @default.
- W2775911710 hasRelatedWork W3117708205 @default.
- W2775911710 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2775911710 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2775911710 magId "2775911710" @default.
- W2775911710 workType "article" @default.