• However, there are presently theories and research for both rational decision-making and emotional decision-making focusing on the important role of emotions in decision-making and the mental process and logic on the important role in rational decision-making. (wikipedia.org)
  • Damasio formulated the somatic marker hypothesis (SMH), that proposes a mechanism by which emotional processes can guide (or bias) behavior, particularly decision-making. (wikipedia.org)
  • True emotions experienced while decision-making are termed immediate emotions, integrating cognition with somatic or bodily experienced components within the autonomic nervous system and outward emotional expressions. (wikipedia.org)
  • Every B2B business is a business between people, where emotional and subjective characteristics play a crucial role and can make all the difference. (forbes.com)
  • In order to find out what exact emotional motives a target group has, create buyers personas. (forbes.com)
  • We describe how psychological theories of emotion conceptualise the interactions of cognitive and emotional processes. (smw.ch)
  • Those that do not have the emotional connection to patients that we have are limited in their ability to incorporate those emotions into their affective decision making. (kevinmd.com)
  • And the final reason I'm comfortable calling this "Manly Emotions," is because what we will see is that our pattern for our emotional life is the God-man, Jesus Christ. (illbehonest.com)
  • Man is so constituted that the conception of certain objects is accompanied with emotion," or as we would say that certain conceptions are emotional. (illbehonest.com)
  • Octavius Winslow says, "The Author of our nature, in making the conception of certain objects emotional has added vastly to man's capacity of enjoyment. (illbehonest.com)
  • people with severe emotional deficits (because of stroke, tumor, or other lesions) suffer enormously from not being able to make rational decisions , despite the fact that their other 'cognitive' faculties (in other words, what is usually called 'intelligence') seem to be functioning fine. (artofmanliness.com)
  • Our culture taught women that their emotions make us uncomfortable, so we shame them for it by saying, "You're so emotional. (goodmenproject.com)
  • Stéphane Côté, Professor of Organizational Behaviour and HR Management at Rotman, discusses how emotional intelligence ('EI') affects decision making. (utoronto.ca)
  • The question we set out to answer was, 'Does emotional intelligence-and in particular, emotion-understanding ability-prevent a decision maker from being affected by incidental emotions? (utoronto.ca)
  • During childhood, whether or not parents use emotional language with their kids-terms like happy , angry and sad -and talk about the sources of these emotions, makes a big difference. (utoronto.ca)
  • Above all, because B2B decision-makers are people, they may sometimes include emotional impulses into their decision-making process. (smallbiztechnology.com)
  • Whatever the reason, validation helps soothe emotional upset. (psychcentral.com)
  • Acknowledgment of emotions is a key to good mental and emotional health. (yourtango.com)
  • At the same time, it argues that if emotional and cognitive processes have their own neural pathways, is also true that, in the context of moral reasoning and behavior regulation, there is significant functional cooperation and integration, which undermine the traditional dichotomy or subordination between cognitive and emotional processes in the constitution of ethical behavior. (bvsalud.org)
  • Building an emotional vocabulary helps you identify your feelings, better understand yourself, and make yourself better understood by others. (cdc.gov)
  • However, recent psychological and neuroscientific research has revealed that emotion and cognition are closely intertwined. (smw.ch)
  • Drawing on studies with both healthy participants and clinical populations, we illustrate the mechanisms and neural substrates underlying the interactions of cognition and emotion. (smw.ch)
  • Cognition & Emotion. (smw.ch)
  • I integrate affective neuroscience with traditional psychotherapy to address the neural bases of emotions through a therapeutic approach to modulate cognition and behaviour. (psychologytoday.com)
  • We use our cognition to weigh options and make decisions. (artofmanliness.com)
  • Here, drawing findings from behavioral economics and neuroeconomics, we provide a new model, labeled "The interactive influence model of emotion and cognition," to elaborate the relationship of emotion and reason in decision making. (frontiersin.org)
  • We then illustrate how cognition modulates emotion and how they cooperate to affect decision making. (frontiersin.org)
  • The contribution of both emotion and cognition is undeniable in this situation. (frontiersin.org)
  • However, the exact dynamic interplay between emotion and cognition remains to be fully explored. (frontiersin.org)
  • In this review, drawing on findings from behavioral economics and neuroeconomics, we firstly identify decision contexts in which emotion overrides reason to influence human behaviors and then discuss how cognition regulates emotion as well as how emotion and cognition cooperate to influence decisions. (frontiersin.org)
  • We were interested to examine how individual differences about justice and fairness are represented in the brain to better understand the contribution of emotion and cognition in moral judgment," explained lead author Jean Decety, the Irving B. Harris Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry. (sciencedaily.com)
  • This finding suggests that perhaps individuals make judgments about behavior based on how they process the reward value of good actions as compared to bad actions. (sciencedaily.com)
  • This article aims to advocate the significance of some neurobiological hypotheses - concerning the relations between moral reasoning and emotions - which propose to devise a special way to an objective and causal understanding of human behavior, as well as of the neural pathway that involves the decision-making process. (bvsalud.org)
  • Schizophrenia is characterized by psychosis (loss of contact with reality), hallucinations (false perceptions), delusions (false beliefs), disorganized speech and behavior, flattened affect (restricted range of emotions), cognitive deficits (impaired reasoning and problem solving), and occupational and social dysfunction. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Elster, J.: Alchemies of the Mind: Rationality and the Emotions. (crossref.org)
  • Today we'll unpack the premises of this perspective, and how emotions can be rational, in that they have rationality in themselves, can align with rationality, and can be harnessed towards rational purposes. (artofmanliness.com)
  • This is the so called dilemma between "the head" (rationality) and "the heart" (emotion). (frontiersin.org)
  • The general opinion was that emotions were a base part of humanity, a vestige of our "animal" past, and that rationality was what separated Homo sapiens from other, lesser animals. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • These findings suggest that selective reduction of emotion is at least as prejudicial for rationality as excessive emotion. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • The frames are partially embedded in the legal sphere thereby reproducing the ideological underpinnings of unemotional rationality whilst concomitantly conveying a more contemporary understanding wherein reason and emotion are conflated. (lu.se)
  • Decisions made with a time delay - intertemporal choice - tend to involve different weights on outcomes depending on their delay, involving hyperbolic discounting and affective forecasting. (wikipedia.org)
  • Affect: used to describe the underlying affective experience of an emotion or a mood. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • Sander D. Models of emotion: The affective neuroscience approach, in Handbook of Human Affective Neuroscience, J.L. Armony and P. Vuilleumier, Editors. (smw.ch)
  • Toward a dynamic theory of emotion: The component process model of affective states. (smw.ch)
  • I suggest to you a small, but unimportant reason is that, as a whole, we are viewed by "management," in general, as lacking skill in making affective decisions . (kevinmd.com)
  • If we all practice affective decision making we can, and will, change the future. (kevinmd.com)
  • Brosch T, Sander D. The appraising brain: Towards a neuro-cognitive model of appraisal processes in emotion. (smw.ch)
  • Abro, A.H., Manzoor, A., Tabatabei, S.A., Treur, Y.: A computational cognitive model integrating different emotion regulation strategies. (crossref.org)
  • Unlike adults, children are still developing their cognitive skills and ability to process emotions, especially in response to a traumatic event. (cdc.gov)
  • Emotions make our judgments less logical yet more meaningful . (artofmanliness.com)
  • The reason system (in "the head") reins in our impulses (from "the heart") and overrides our snap judgments. (frontiersin.org)
  • Reason plays a central role in our daily life, especially when we are confronted with different choices, decisions and judgments. (frontiersin.org)
  • System 1 is more driven by intuition, snap judgments, and emotion. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • Emotions are mental states brought on by neurophysiological changes, variously associated with thoughts, feelings, behavioral responses, and a degree of pleasure or displeasure . (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • Feeling: not all feelings include emotion, such as the feeling of knowing. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • In the context of emotion, feelings are best understood as a subjective representation of emotions, private to the individual experiencing them. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • And there's a connection between our emotions, our feelings and our thoughts. (illbehonest.com)
  • In our pop culture, emotions are really nothing more than strong feelings we basically cannot control. (modernreformation.org)
  • Those of us who feel our feelings, interpret them correctly, and then act upon that information, have an advantage over those of us who rely solely on intellect to make decisions. (kmarshack.com)
  • But decision-making is more complex when the feelings are part of a financial plan for your business, or whether to fire an employee. (kmarshack.com)
  • 1. Always checkout your feelings before making any decision. (kmarshack.com)
  • The first reason to develop your gifts is that you will gain the ability to be in touch with your feelings. (yourtango.com)
  • Your feelings need to be acknowledged and can be a guide to making decisions. (yourtango.com)
  • Healthy communication requires that you put your feelings, or emotions, into words. (cdc.gov)
  • Childhood is a sensitive period for the acquisition of these skills, and as a result, there is robust evidence showing that parents play a major role in determining whether somebody is good at understanding where their emotions-and other people's emotions-come from. (utoronto.ca)
  • Empaths are usually unaware that they are "reading" other people's energy and often mistake another person's emotions for their own. (beliefnet.com)
  • Just picture wrapping your energy in a magic cloak that makes you invisible to everyone, and you won't take home other people's energy. (beliefnet.com)
  • However, it is not a company-an independent and unemotional entity that makes completely rational decisions based on technical and objective characteristics-that decides whether or not to buy a product. (forbes.com)
  • Emotion determines how we perceive our world, organise our memory, and make important decisions. (smw.ch)
  • Our position of being able to incorporate both the emotion and the reason into decisions, makes us uniquely qualified to be leaders of the "system. (kevinmd.com)
  • However, from Darwin's evolutionary perspective, emotion is adaptive, guiding us to make sound decisions in uncertainty. (frontiersin.org)
  • My colleague Jeremy Yip (a Rotman PhD graduate) and I felt that this was the most relevant aspect of EI for making good decisions. (utoronto.ca)
  • For instance, studies show that people have a tendency to allow incidental emotions to influence things like investment decisions. (utoronto.ca)
  • They always make the right investment decisions. (kmarshack.com)
  • Those individuals who have trusted their EQ throughout childhood and have refined and developed those skills into adult life, are in a much better position to make successful decisions. (kmarshack.com)
  • We now know that up to 90 percent of the decisions we make are based on emotion. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • Through dozens of experiments over decades, Kahneman created a new model to explain how people think and make decisions. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • What may be most important about Kahneman's work is his finding that most human decisions are made emotionally , and that the function of human reason is to justify those decisions after the fact. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • They validate you and give you confidence in making decisions. (yourtango.com)
  • Depends on the degree of emergency and the timeframe in which community decisions must be made. (cdc.gov)
  • It is easier to think clearly, communicate with others in a healthy way, and make healthy and safe decisions when we're calm. (cdc.gov)
  • Thus, emotions have been described as consisting of a coordinated set of responses, which may include verbal, physiological , behavioral, and neural mechanisms. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • I really strongly believe that people are artists and they don't even realize it because they make art in so many other different ways that aren't typically recognized as art. (wou.edu)
  • So if I mention certain words to you, or to other people, they will evoke some emotions. (illbehonest.com)
  • If I say "dentist" to some people, that's going to evoke some emotion, right? (illbehonest.com)
  • I have always had a deep interest in emotions, personalities and why people are the way they are. (psychologytoday.com)
  • There are many reasons why people today are feeling overwhelmed and burned out. (psychologytoday.com)
  • However, research shows that what actually happens when you remove emotions from judgement, is that people struggle to make choices at all. (artofmanliness.com)
  • Green tea has many healthy benefits like decreasing inflammation and fighting cancer, but what most people neglect is that green tea has many beauty-related benefits that will make you want to drink it even if you`re not a tea fan. (stevenaitchison.co.uk)
  • 65. Because they make some people a litter bit crazy. (worldsbestcatlitter.com)
  • That's because it predicts whether people will fall prey to the effects of incidental emotions that have nothing to do with the decision at hand. (utoronto.ca)
  • You write that, "People develop the ability to understand emotions via multiple processes. (utoronto.ca)
  • The extent to which people either take Psychology classes or read about it in books can make them more or less likely develop a toolkit for identifying emotions and their causes. (utoronto.ca)
  • These people are likely to learn, for example, that the reason they feel anxious about something is that they cannot predict or control what's going to happen to them. (utoronto.ca)
  • Because people are answering fewer phone calls as a means to manage their emotions. (smallbiztechnology.com)
  • Passion is the reason why people camp out in wretched weather conditions to get tickets to a Coldplay show. (adweek.com)
  • Empaths make great listeners and often find that people tell them their whole life story. (beliefnet.com)
  • For emotionally sensitive people, managing their emotions so they can communicate most effectively and with the best results means learning to manage the intense emotions they experience on a regular basis. (psychcentral.com)
  • Validation from others is one of the best tools to help emotionally sensitive people manage their emotions effectively. (psychcentral.com)
  • People who care about justice are swayed more by reason than emotion, according to new brain scan research. (sciencedaily.com)
  • People who care about justice are swayed more by reason than emotion. (sciencedaily.com)
  • And it was you, who identify yourselves with the deceptively innocuous name, "We the People," who constructed the monstrosity that now demands you take any injection it decrees and refrain from speaking any word or even thinking any thought that threatens it. (fee.org)
  • Andrew notes that people come to videos for one reason, perhaps they need to learn something, but stay or even return because they enjoyed the content. (techsmith.com)
  • Consider how teaching people about this product can make them feel better. (techsmith.com)
  • They show people exactly what to expect and build trust in you as a provider who can help them achieve their goals. (techsmith.com)
  • In this case, understanding your audience's emotions and using a story can help people move from one emotion (fear) to another (hope) in an incredibly powerful way. (techsmith.com)
  • People with disabilities need healthcare services and programs that provide information for optimal health for the same reasons everyone else does-to stay well, active, and participate fully in their communities. (cdc.gov)
  • This quick guide can help officials navigate a discussion with people in the community before and during those times when community-level emergency actions must be taken even though 1) time constraints do not allow for a protracted consensus building process and 2) the community-level decision must be made with incomplete, new and possibly changing information. (cdc.gov)
  • 1 million tions of treatment course and outcomes modalities is made within the next 7 people are suffering from addiction to from this centre can be applied to other days. (who.int)
  • You don't want to have unlimited use of the same sperm donor, even if that's somebody who people want to choose because of their appearance, achievement, or whatever reason they might have for going back again and again to a particular donor. (medscape.com)
  • Before taking any recommendations, people want detailed explanations, strong reasons, and second opinions from people they trust. (cdc.gov)
  • Instead they felt other things - 'passions', 'accidents of the soul', 'moral sentiments' - and explained them very differently from how we understand emotions today. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • In 1924, Andre Breton published the Manifesto of Surrealism, which defined the movement as "psychic automatism in its pure state … in the absence of any control exercised by reason, exempt from any aesthetic or moral concern. (adobe.com)
  • while contemplation of the decision's consequences may give rise to immediate emotions, known as anticipatory or integral influences, immediate emotions can also be related to the current environment or the dispositional affect of the person. (wikipedia.org)
  • As opposed to incidental emotions, integral emotions are emotions that are caused by the decision itself. (utoronto.ca)
  • In it, Damasio reports: "Work from my laboratory has shown that emotion is integral to the process of reasoning and decision making, for worse and for better. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • In the context of attitudes, however, System 2 is more of an apologist for the emotions of System 1 than a critic of those emotions-an endorser rather than an enforcer. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • Journalistic live blogging entails the conundrum of capturing emotions in a context where they should be absent in order to snap up the sensational in the subtle drama of the courtroom and present it in a way that attracts readers, thus making it clickable. (lu.se)
  • Based on Barrett's concept, we define emotion as a subjective, conscious experience characterized by biological reaction and mental states. (frontiersin.org)
  • Chohra, A., Madani, K.: Biological regulation and psychological mechanisms models of adaptive decision-making behaviors: drives, emotions, and personality. (crossref.org)
  • Loewenstein and Lerner divide emotions during decision-making into two types: those anticipating future emotions and those immediately experienced while deliberating and deciding. (wikipedia.org)
  • Loewenstein, G., Lerner, J.S.: The role of affect in decision-making. (crossref.org)
  • Anticipated (or expected) emotions are not experienced directly, but are expectations of how the person will feel once gains or losses associated with that decision are experienced. (wikipedia.org)
  • I suggest to you that the single biggest reason we feel that we have been diminished to the role of a cog in the machine is that the "system" figured out how to make money from our interaction with the patient. (kevinmd.com)
  • Her passion is to create a safe, welcoming space for clients of all backgrounds to feel seen and to move towards wellness. (psychologytoday.com)
  • Additionally, emotions are essential indicators for our lives, letting us know when something is good for us and when something is not good for us, based on how we feel. (goodmenproject.com)
  • Because these emotions put us in a certain kind of mental mindset, and when a decision is in front of us, we sometimes have a hard time separating these emotions from the way we feel about the decision itself. (utoronto.ca)
  • These emotions can get the better of you making you feel down or depressed. (philips.com)
  • Surrealist images might make a kind of sense, but like abstract images, they are most concerned with expressiveness and making you feel something on a deep level you might not be able to explain. (adobe.com)
  • They hold onto someone who makes them feel inferior. (thoughtcatalog.com)
  • Because no matter what anyone says or how anyone makes you feel, you have to do what makes you happy. (thoughtcatalog.com)
  • Empaths can feel the emotion of someone miles and miles away. (beliefnet.com)
  • Some say it's because when we don't feel understood it creates thoughts of being left out or not fitting in. (psychcentral.com)
  • These are true, Spirit-born emotions which we FEEL! (cwgministries.org)
  • If you can make someone feel something, if you can make them relate to what you're doing, your video is going to be more successful. (techsmith.com)
  • All of these factors can make you feel stressed, anxious, or depressed. (medlineplus.gov)
  • When you feel stressed and anxious, you may breathe faster, which can make you feel short of breath. (medlineplus.gov)
  • This is part of the reason you tend to feel better when you talk to a friend or trusted adult about something that is upsetting you. (cdc.gov)
  • Octavius Winslow in his book "The Sympathy of Christ," says, "emotion is always attached to some conception formed by the intellectual faculties. (illbehonest.com)
  • When you are made alive in Christ, you can hear God speaking through the emotions of your "New Self. (cwgministries.org)
  • Although unrelated to the decision under consideration, this type of emotion can still impact the decision-making process as an incidental influence. (wikipedia.org)
  • Incidental emotions are the emotions we carry with us to the decision that have nothing to do with the decision. (utoronto.ca)
  • Even though incidental emotions come from other sources, they are brought to a decision-making scenario and are experienced as the decision is made. (utoronto.ca)
  • Which is why a well-executed experience that taps into your senses, your emotions, and creates vivid memories and powerful, positive associations doesn't just deliver a solid "return on brand favorability. (adweek.com)
  • The intense emotions can exact a higher influence on the decision than the probabilities under consideration. (wikipedia.org)
  • Reason alone can never be a motive to any action of the will… it can never oppose passion in the direction of the will… The reason is, and ought to be, the slave of the passions, and can never pretend to any other office than to serve and obey them. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • The passion and emotion that is conveyed by Aleman seems impossible- many viewers were in disbelief that these were not photographs. (wou.edu)
  • The relation between reason and passion has fascinated philosophers for centuries. (frontiersin.org)
  • 2. Experiences create PASSION (aka LOVE) . (adweek.com)
  • For those who already struggle with mental health issues, the pandemic has made things so much worse. (psychologytoday.com)
  • Being stressed or depressed can make COPD symptoms worse and make it harder to care for yourself. (medlineplus.gov)
  • So, how do you effectively create content that addresses these intrinsic emotions? (forbes.com)
  • they are the foundation of reason and often contain a wisdom the analytic brain can't reach. (artofmanliness.com)
  • When referring to reason, words like logic, analytic or reflective may come to mind. (frontiersin.org)
  • Finally, how soon an outcome may happen impacts the related immediate emotions: the sooner the impending possible outcome, the more intense the emotion associated with that event. (wikipedia.org)
  • We then review recent research investigating how emotion impacts our perception, attention, memory, and decision-making. (smw.ch)
  • Surreal photography represents unconscious ideas, dreams and emotions. (adobe.com)
  • Jungian psychoanalysis, particularly the conflict between reason and the unconscious, made Pollock aware of how central his emotions had become in his life and work ( 4 ). (cdc.gov)
  • That is, making a decision requires knowledge about facts and values as well as involves the deliberation about consequence of the selected choice ( Bechara and Van Der Linden, 2005 ). (frontiersin.org)
  • and regulating your emotions , which involves coping with stress, modifying undesirable emotions and generating desired emotions. (utoronto.ca)
  • While there is nothing like practice and life experience, here are a few basic tips to improve your decision making by including relevant feeling information. (kmarshack.com)
  • For this reason, they need to practice consistent self-care. (beliefnet.com)
  • Children's organs are also still developing, so lasting damage can be done during a chemical outbreak, and their smaller physical size means they aren't able to use equipment like oxygen masks or life vests made for adult-sized faces and bodies. (cdc.gov)
  • One way of thinking holds that the mental process of decision-making is (or should be) rational: a formal process based on optimizing utility. (wikipedia.org)
  • This process, and the anticipation of such emotion, is referred to as a counterfactual comparison. (wikipedia.org)
  • The dynamic architecture of emotion: Evidence for the component process model. (smw.ch)
  • On the nature and function of emotion: A component process approach, in Approaches to emotion, K.R. Scherer and P. Ekman, Editors. (smw.ch)
  • Hey and Orme, 1994 ), we define reason as a process in which individuals analyze the pros and cons of the presented alternatives, calculate the utility of different options, and then choose one option that leads to a maximal profit. (frontiersin.org)
  • Creating a brand new program is one of the most exciting moments in the design process. (graphistudio.com)
  • Children breathe faster than adults, spend more time outside, and have proportionately greater skin surface exposed to the environment, making them uniquely vulnerable to biological or chemical substances. (cdc.gov)
  • Following Plato's description of emotion and reason as two horses pulling us in opposite directions, modern dual-system models of decision making endorse the antagonism between reason and emotion. (frontiersin.org)
  • While a good night's sleep can have a positive effect on your body, mind, and emotions, the opposite effect can happen due to sleep deprivation. (selfgrowth.com)
  • Jesus died to redeem your whole person-not just your reason and intellect. (cwgministries.org)
  • Either disgust and anger or perhaps some sense of delight, finally somebody's going to drain the swamp or make America great. (illbehonest.com)
  • Emotion serves to decouple stimulus and response, in The nature of emotion: Fundamental questions, P. Ekman and R.J. Davidson, Editors. (smw.ch)
  • The fifth reason is about receiving aromas and tastes that do not exist with a physical stimulus. (yourtango.com)
  • This reflects the fact that emotions are not only complex in themselves but are also one aspect of the complexity of human nature. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • Izard, C.: Human Emotions. (crossref.org)
  • A building made entirely of human hands? (adobe.com)
  • Yet for over 1,000 years in the West, philosophers, scientists, and even psychologists did not focus their attention on human emotion . (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • But the subject of what emotions are and what their evolutionary or survival value is to human beings was not addressed to any great extent until the last 20 years. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • The need to make an original statement, always at the heart of artistic and other human endeavor, permeated not only the subject matter of abstract expressionism but also its technical execution. (cdc.gov)
  • The current variants show that the virus is doing its best to make itself more suitable to ongoing circulation within the human population. (bvsalud.org)
  • One reason may be because COPD patient's quality of life can be strongly impaired by their condition. (philips.com)
  • Also, immediate emotions can be very sensitive to how vivid the possible outcome is to the decision-maker. (wikipedia.org)
  • Hume attempted to explain that reason and further action would be subject to the desires and experience of the self. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • They combine to create consumers' overall experience with your brand. (hellobar.com)
  • The problem with viral is that it's a crap shoot and all of the time spent chasing the 'viral dragon' could be invested in improving the customer experience, which ironically is what creates authentic word of mouth in the first place. (typepad.com)
  • The experience of emotion has a powerful influence on daily-life decision making. (frontiersin.org)
  • Though, the exact relationship between reason and emotion remains a mystery, our daily experience leaves little doubt that both emotion and reason impact our decision making to a great extent. (frontiersin.org)
  • The first platform purpose-built for unified customer experience management (Unified-CXM) and trusted by the enterprise. (sprinklr.com)
  • Being overwhelmed with emotion is not a pleasant experience. (psychcentral.com)
  • Experience Healing for Your Body, Soul, and Spirit through Kingdom Emotions! (cwgministries.org)
  • Embrace your redeemed emotions and experience miraculous healing in a fresh way today! (cwgministries.org)
  • Well-targeted and well-deployed emotion seems to be a support system without which the edifice of reason cannot operate properly. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • But every brick in this edifice of evil was made of the same clay: invading the property of your neighbors to obtain what you believed was additional safety. (fee.org)
  • You should put into words the emotions your audience is feeling at the beginning of your message so that they know you understand their experiences. (cdc.gov)
  • Yet there have been periods and philosophies that have seen emotions and reason not as contradictory but complementary. (artofmanliness.com)
  • A separate stand-alone data file was created for the Alternative Medicine/Complementary and Alternative Medicine Supplement (ALT). (cdc.gov)
  • A future where physicians are respected not only for their role at the bedside and as money-making cogs in the machine but also for their role in redesigning a system to deliver health care to the public that places the patient-physician relationship at the center. (kevinmd.com)
  • Plato had four levels: control of the emotions through Temperance, Spirit through Courage, Reason through Wisdom, and then making the leap through Eros to the Forms and Beauty. (philosophytalk.org)
  • Anyone with a sixth-grade education and control over his emotions could spot them a mile away. (fee.org)
  • Control your emotions. (cdc.gov)
  • I was so sad, I could barely make it to my room after school before the tears would start falling. (madinamerica.com)
  • Breazeal, C., Brooks, R.A.: Robot emotion: a functional perspective. (crossref.org)
  • Generally, it is the contemplation of incremental losses or gains that generates anticipated emotions in decision-makers, as opposed to their overall condition. (wikipedia.org)