Not exact matches
The generic characterization of the
subjective forms which I describe in the next section as
active in the formation of religious experience should be understood as depending upon, and leaving room for, a wide variety of historical embodiments, each with its own individual qualitative
response.
What is evident in emotional experience is the
active,
subjective response to something other.
Three factors stand out as essential to Whitehead's account of emotional experience: (1)
active response on the part of the subject, (2) the qualitative character of this
response, and (3) the object as causally related to the
subjective response.