Human Emotions the James-Cannon Debate

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Human Emotions the James-Cannon Debate

Arlene Moreno

November 19, 2002

Psy 323

Emotions in science for many decades were non-exciting, and were believed to be a number of sensory perceptions, until the 1980’s, when a doctoral student Candace Pert, changed that idea. In this paper I will briefly discuss the history for emotions and what has become the largest debate over 100 years which focuses on the mental and physical origin of emotions. As the founding fathers for this debate, William James, believed emotions originated in the body where as Walter Cannon, believed they originated in the brain. While emotions have stayed the same, the process in which they are understood has not remained, because they are now believed to be a part of the human body. Through the discovery of small chemicals call ligands and the receivers of the chemicals called receptors I will explain how emotions are processed throughout the system. The system opened the opportunity to find that emotions are not confined into the brain only, but demonstrated to science and the world that James and Cannon were both correct on their theories.  

According to James theory of emotion humans feel emotions through pyshical action, meaning that the body tells the brain how to feel about an emotion. Hames argues that the body must act before the brain can resigester any emotion. In fear the heart pounds, muscles tense, and breath shortens, and for James the body first displays the fear pyschically far before the brain can register the emotion. Once the body has offically taken form of the emotion it is then transmitted to the brain where it is categorized as a spesific emotion. The body sends signals to the brain in form of actions through visceral signaling, therefore The brain only absorbs what the body gives it. But James did not think of emotions as feelings but as sensory perceptions. Fear would be categorized as fear after the brain registered the sensory perception of the heart pounding, muscles tensing, and breath shortening. Emotions for James in the 1890’s had a very different meaning to what popular medicine has given it and although the idea received recognition it was discarded.

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        In the 1920’s a student of James, Walter Cannon emerged with the theory that emotions originated in the head and systematically TRICKLED down to the body.  Though testing on various animals he found that by electric jolts on the vagus, a part of the brain, the animals became highly excited. The body-demonstrated emotions when the electric jolts hit the parts of the brain, which meant emotions, were in the brain. Under Cannon experiment the body displayed what the brain signaled, therefore the emotions the body demonstrated were displayed on after brain instructed the body. For James the reactions the body ...

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