by Antonio Damasio.
"In the very least, we can say that emotion is always in the loop of reason. Emotion is
an adaptive response, part of the vital process of normal reasoning and
decision-making. It is one of the highest levels of bioregulation for the human
organism and has an enormous influence on the maintenance of our homeostatic balance
and thus of our well-being. Last but not least, emotion is critical to learning and
memory."
"What we have learned, then, is that the brain has at least two systems for assessing
the value of events. One system leads to a conscious recall, through memory, of options
for action and of representations of future outcomes. Then we use logical reasoning
and knowledge to decide that we will do X instead of Y. Another system, probably
evolutionarily far older, acts even before the first one. It activates biases related to our
previous emotional experience in comparable situations. These nonconscious biases
affect the options and reasoning strategies that we present to our conscious selves."
"We do ourselves a disservice when we think of human beings as exclusively logic-
or knowledge-driven, and fail to pay attention to the role of the emotions. The two
systems are enmeshed [my emphasis] because that is the way our brain and our organism have been put
together by evolution."
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