Pain, pleasure, and the intentionality of emotions as experiences of values

a new phenomenological perspective

Panos Theodorou

pp. 625-641

The article starts with a brief overview of the kinds of approaches that have been attempted for the presentation of Phenomenology's view on the emotions. I then pass to Husserl's unsatisfactory efforts to disclose the intentionality of emotions and their intentional correlation with values. Next, I outline the idea of a new, "normalized phenomenological" approach of emotions and values. Pleasure and pain, then, are first explored as affective feelings (reell lived-experiences). In the cases examined, it is shown that, primordially, pleasure and pain are recordings for our bodily and spiritual states resulting from our confrontation with beings and situations in the world. Delight and distress are, subsequently, approached as the first full-fledged emotive acts that animate or intentionally interpret pleasure and pain in specific ways. The elementary values of agreeableness and disagreeableness appear correspondingly to the latter in relation to the very pleasure or pain and to what has caused them. In other words, agreeable and disagreeable show how what we confront in the world weighs for us, what value it has for the embodied intentional consciousness, for its state and functioning as well as for its existentio-praxial possibilities in the lifeworld.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s11097-014-9371-1

Full citation:

Theodorou, P. (2014). Pain, pleasure, and the intentionality of emotions as experiences of values: a new phenomenological perspective. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 13 (4), pp. 625-641.

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