A critical lesson from neuroscientific research concerns
human emotionality, which is much more pervasive than initially thought.
We are now beginning to understand some facets of
human emotionality, decision - making, morality, trauma and the drive for political power down to the cellular level, by observing changes in neurochemistry, neural pathways, and neuro - anatomical transformations in the brain.
We are now beginning to understand some facets of
human emotionality, decision - making, morality, trauma and...
Not exact matches
On top of that, survey respondents (and
human coders of political texts) tend to rely on their own dispositions to evaluate political speeches with respect to
emotionality.
With insights from neuroscience, this theory argues that
human nature is characterized by
emotionality, amorality, and egoism, and that working for social cohesion and sustainable history requires careful consideration of the dignity needs of
human beings.
The sustainability of any political order depends on governance mechanisms that successfully balance the ever - present tension between these nine
human dignity needs and the three attributes of
human nature as I define them:
emotionality, amorality and egoism.
Neuroscientific insights point to three key characteristics of
human nature:
emotionality (we are far more emotional than we think we are, and
emotionality play a central role in decision - making), amorality (we are born amoral and our moral compass is developed in the course of our existence), and egoism (we are driven to survival, which is a basic form of egoism, i.e. preservation of the self).
Governments must craft public policies carefully so as to mediate between the
emotionality, amorality and egoism of
human nature and our nine dignity needs.
To that end, the most successful and durable governance models will be those that balance between the ever - present tensions between the three attributes of
human nature (
emotionality, amorality and egoism), on the one hand, and the nine
human dignity needs (reason, security,
human rights, accountability, transparency, justice, opportunity, innovation, inclusiveness), on the other.
The most critical of the lessons offered by neuroscience for policy - makers lies in the findings about the underlying
emotionality of
human nature.
As evidence that
humans are the principal source of
emotionality among
human artifacts, consider
human visual signs.
Yuen - Ying Lam's art practice explores the
emotionality of being
human in this absurd world, where many relationships are tainted by power, fear and hatred.
I thought I was talking about the role of
emotionality (again, NOT»em otionalism») in real, functioning
human beings.
Among the points made: A system with AP, AE and AI 2, (automated personality, automated
emotionality and automated illogicality) might be seen as being equivalent to a
human.
Findings of both animal and
human studies suggest that adaptation to novelty, altered attention, and increased
emotionality