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Life Sciences => Physiology & Medicine => Topic started by: colarris on 10/04/2010 19:27:41

Title: Why did humans develop so many emotions?
Post by: colarris on 10/04/2010 19:27:41
 
 Why did humans develop so many emotions? To survive we would have only ever needed the basics while everything else like a conscience etc I can only see as a weakness. 
Title: Why did humans develop so many emotions?
Post by: Enki on 11/04/2010 22:00:55
Emotions are the way we experience instinct. Our instincts boost our likelihood of surviving and reproducing. Look for books on sociobiology. Evolutionary biologists have gone a long way toward explaining many of our instinctive behaviors.

If you'd mention a couple of emotions that seem particularly useless, I'd take a shot at explaining what they're 'for'.
Title: Why did humans develop so many emotions?
Post by: Jessica H on 12/04/2010 04:08:27
A conscience isn't a weakness for a social animal like ourselves.  It helps us live in harmony in groups.  According to the group selection model, any trait that benefits the group will also be selected for.  Groups that work well together pass on their genes, while a group that's at each other's throats won't be successful. 
Title: Why did humans develop so many emotions?
Post by: Pwee on 12/04/2010 09:53:49
Group selection model has never been proven, so I would be careful with that.

Collaris, you seem to talk about two separate things: emotions and consciousness.

There are basic emotions (most models describe 6-8, Ekman's studies with native tribes and infants confirm 6). Anger, Disgust, Fear, Happiness, Sadness, Surprise.  These are undoubtedly useful. The other emotions arise from these through social learning and mainly have social roles, so that we are more likely to fit into our culture and the society. Anything that helps us live together is evolutionary adaptive.

Consciousness is another question. There is still a big debate going on about wether it has any use or not. But that depends on what do you mean by consciousness.
Title: Why did humans develop so many emotions?
Post by: yor_on on 13/04/2010 17:02:24
As with everything else it comes from us being adaptive, animals express emotions too as anyone that ever had had a pet knows. And it's what makes us being able to function together. I don't think Jessica's words were that wrong, there are a lot of behavioral studies that focus on social traits. The question is if there is a genetic trait to it, if we sort of are evolving emotionally through some sort of genetic selection?

I doubt it, take ten people and place them on a island with limited resources and see what happens :) 'Lord of the flies' is a good example on that. But we have changed over the centuries, in medieval times good fun could be throwing a cat in the fire and watch it burn. But that have more to do with how we objectify people and other things around us and little with emotions per se. Those watching the cat burn could later fall into tears at the theater watching some poor child 'die'.

Emotions are good for us, and help us communicate and help each other achieve common goals, even though not always pleasurable. There are people with brain damage without empathy or with very little of it. They have committed some of the ugliest crimes against other people that I know of. And as everything else related to the brain it seems to be more related to specific areas, which shouldn't be taken as that you will be unable to feel empathy with those areas damaged, The brain is very plastic. But specifically they seem to be localized at the bilateral temporal gyrus and the superior temporal sulcus. Look Here. (http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn10108-spectrum-of-empathy-found-in-the-brain.html)

But emotions seems to be something we always have been born with, to that we also seem to have instinctive (genes?) crowd behaviors that are the same all over the world as I understands it. I don't think we would have made it so far without them. And what I think have modified our modern behavior is not our genes 'changing' but education. And that's why I think the Internet is the greatest invention since the wheel, as it gives us a constant possibility to learn new things and interact. The more we learn the better we can relate to others and the better our judgment, and I'm not talking about getting a degree, I'm talking about living and learning. And I think that asking questions like you did Colarris, is the first step on an never ending quest for knowledge. If you want to read a really cool book I would recommend "Crowds and Power" by Elias Canetti.

He's a real cool read, and lived in turbulent times, the second world war. He studied the behavior of people and then wrote a book about it, he never received the recognizance that book deserved as it didn't 'fit in' with the theories prevalent under that time but it's very enlightening all the same, and cool.
Title: Why did humans develop so many emotions?
Post by: Pwee on 14/04/2010 09:00:29
I agree with Jessica in that emotions help us live together and interact socially more effectively, I just don't agree using the group selection model. (Not that it isn't logical, it just hasn't been proven yet, it's a fancy looking theory at the moment.)