Re: virus: peep...peep..........E.E.A.

From: Michele Wiegand (michele@ulster.net)
Date: Mon Jan 14 2002 - 08:08:13 MST


On 14 Jan 2002, at 15:39, Steele, Kirk A wrote:

so many places to start.....................hmmmmmmmmmmmm

Extreme
        Emotional
                Attachment

Not: Extremely Emotional, or Extremely Attached, or Emotionally Attached
Not: Intellectual recognition of the increased survival probability when one
is ensocialized
Not: Genetic and 'primal' precursors of innate behaviors that ensure progeny
survive

<snip>
Counterpoint to ATTRACTION: Religious zealotry meets the specification of
Extreme Emotional Attachment. How does this parallel mate attraction?

Are there any cognitive theorists in the audience?

---
I'm sorry, I misunderstood the question. I'm not a cognitive theorist, 
but I have studied neurobiology.
Some ideas:
--Religious devotion and other forms of emotional extremes affect 
motivation. Since humans interpret "life" and search for meanings, 
the presence of passions and devotions counteracts the other side 
of life: meaninglessness, absurdity, the void.
--Particular to religious devotion, Freud talked about an "oceanic" 
sensation in infancy, where the self has not yet been distinguished 
from the non-self. If raised in a religious setting, subsequent events 
of the "oceanic" feeling would likely be interpreted in relation to 
God, the heavens. IOW, the religious background would dominate 
over other interpretations of that feeling, and the experience would 
probably make a person more devout, feeling more connected to 
God. Others might also feel a divine inspiration in artistic or even 
scientific work. (Passion in the pursuit of creating or discovering.)
--Can extreme emotional attachment be separated from "love?" 
Religious devotion seems to be based on an idea of unity and love. 
I would guess that any form of extreme emotional attachment 
involves oxytocin. Thus people are "married to their work," or in the 
case of religious figures, people experience the pure love of God.
"Exploratory Considerations: What constitutes an emotion? What 
is the basic biochemistry of emotions? How are an individuals 
emotions primed by the environment?"
<quote from _Principles of Neuroscience_, Kandel, Schwarts, 
Jessel>
In 1937 James Papez suggested that the limbic lobe formed a 
neural circuit that provides the anatomical substratum for emotions. 
Based on experiments suggesting that the hypothalamus has a 
critical role in the expression of emotion, Papez argued that, since 
emotions reach consciousness and thought and conversely, higher 
cognitive functions affect emotions, the hypothalamus must 
communicate reciprocally with higher cortical centers. He proposed 
that the cortex influences the hypothalamus through connections of 
the cingulate gyrus to the hippocampal formation. According to this 
idea, the hippocampal formation would process this information and 
project it to the mammillary bodies of the hypocampus by way of 
the fornix. The hypothalamus in turn would provide information to 
the cingulate gyrus by a pathway from mammillary bodies to the 
anterior thalamic nuclei (through the mamillothalamic tract) and 
from the anterior thalamic nuclei to the cingulate gyrus.
The concept of the limbic system was later expanded by Paul 
MacLean to include other structure... [including the amydala]. 
Modern anatomical studies have supported Papez's outline of the 
limbic system, and have demonstrated extensive and direct 
connections between neocortical areas, the hyppocampal 
formation, and the amygdala.
</quote>
Also, oxytocin and vasopressin are released from the pituitary 
neurohypophysis, and the hypothalamus connects to the pituitary. 
The experience of emotions involves neurotransmitters, the 
autonomic nervous system and the endocrine system (which is 
largely controlled by the hypothalamus). 
The primary emotions are anger, fear, pleasure and contentment, 
which are experienced directly as a change in body biochemistry. 
For example, the hypothalamus will send a releasing hormone to 
the pituitary, which will send another releasing/stimulating hormone 
to the adrenal glands, and the person gets a burst of adrenaline. I 
would categorize emotions like love and sadness as higher order 
emotions, which are distinguished by the meaning given to them by 
the cortex, and thus become complex "feelings."


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