Given a desire to think about X, I can directly think about X.
Given a desire to feel Y, I cannot directly act to satisfy this desire. Instead I have to do things like go to therapy.
Do you acknowledge this difference? How do you account for it? — hypericin
Yes DK, your arguments are just too devastating, to the point that I had to call in some favors from the moderators to edit your posts, and I can valiantly pretend you didn't crush me with your brilliance.If that makes you feel better, carry on. — skyblack
This seems plainly untrue.
I feel grief. I desire to be happy. If the desire *was* the feeling, this desire would fulfill itself immediately,
I desire something, and feel pain by the absence of its fulfillment. Its fulfillment brings me pleasure. Here the desire is linked to a feeling which is the opposite of its fulfillent.
I desire something, and anticipate happiness in its fulfillment. Its fulfilment leaves me feeling empty. — hypericin
The parallel here with thinking is that we can try to think what we want to think, but unpleasant thoughts can intrude in spite of our efforts, as is the case with ptsd, depression and anxiety. — Joshs
I believe they arise from brain states. They are a perceptual dimension no different than the five senses. But what they are perceiving is internal.What do you believe as the causes for emotions? — Corvus
Or, we can examine what is phenomenologically right in front of our noses.If we know about the causes, nature, and more accurate definitions of emotions, perhaps, we could understand emotions better, and answers to the OP could emerge naturally? — Corvus
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