Description

Book Synopsis
Emotions are two-sided. They contain deep truths about what it means to be human, but they also deceive, mislead, and manipulate. They are celebrated for the insights they provide, but they also are denied, repressed, and dismissed. Though many institutions recognize and study the power of emotion, its potential has yet to be fully realized.

Barbara J. McClure seeks to rectify this. In Emotions: Problems and Promise for Human Flourishing, she examines how emotions can be properly engaged for health and healing both individually and corporately. Starting with the current understandings of emotion, she notes the limitations of current thought. She then draws on significant emotions theories from ancient philosophy, Christian theology, natural sciences, psychology, social theory, and contemporary neuroscience to create a more well-rounded understanding of emotions and their place in Western society. Ultimately, McClure argues that emotions, if understood and engaged correctly, can be a source of guidance for flourishing and a resource for nurturing the common good.

With this wide-ranging multidisciplinary approach, McClure proposes an understanding of emotions that allows for a new model of human flourishing: one that does not dismiss emotions but utilizes them properly to engage life's challenges. Emotions should not be censored, silenced, or sidelined - they are important tools for discerning and cultivating what is Good and resisting what is not.

Table of Contents
  • Introduction: Confusion and Ambivalence about Emotions
  • 1. Emotions as Dangerous, Disruptive, and Symptoms of Dis-ease: Socrates/Plato and Early Greek Perspectives
  • 2. Emotions as Sinful, Signs of the Fall, and Impediments to Salvation: Philo and Early Christian Theologians' Perspectives
  • 3. Emotions as Functional for Physiological Survival: Darwin and Evolutionary Science
  • 4. Emotions as Pathological, Signs of Dysfunction, and Indicators of Need: Sigmund Freud and Depth Psychology
  • 5. Emotions as Relational and Sociocultural Artifacts: Challenges to Natural Scientific Understandings

    Emotions: Problems and Promise for Human

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      £47.60

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      RRP £56.00 – you save £8.40 (15%)

      Order before 4pm today for delivery by Wed 24 Jun 2026.

      A Hardback by Barbara J. McClure

      1 in stock


        View other formats and editions of Emotions: Problems and Promise for Human by Barbara J. McClure

        Publisher: Baylor University Press
        Publication Date: 30/09/2019
        ISBN13: 9781602583290, 978-1602583290
        ISBN10: 1602583293

        Description

        Book Synopsis
        Emotions are two-sided. They contain deep truths about what it means to be human, but they also deceive, mislead, and manipulate. They are celebrated for the insights they provide, but they also are denied, repressed, and dismissed. Though many institutions recognize and study the power of emotion, its potential has yet to be fully realized.

        Barbara J. McClure seeks to rectify this. In Emotions: Problems and Promise for Human Flourishing, she examines how emotions can be properly engaged for health and healing both individually and corporately. Starting with the current understandings of emotion, she notes the limitations of current thought. She then draws on significant emotions theories from ancient philosophy, Christian theology, natural sciences, psychology, social theory, and contemporary neuroscience to create a more well-rounded understanding of emotions and their place in Western society. Ultimately, McClure argues that emotions, if understood and engaged correctly, can be a source of guidance for flourishing and a resource for nurturing the common good.

        With this wide-ranging multidisciplinary approach, McClure proposes an understanding of emotions that allows for a new model of human flourishing: one that does not dismiss emotions but utilizes them properly to engage life's challenges. Emotions should not be censored, silenced, or sidelined - they are important tools for discerning and cultivating what is Good and resisting what is not.

        Table of Contents
        • Introduction: Confusion and Ambivalence about Emotions
        • 1. Emotions as Dangerous, Disruptive, and Symptoms of Dis-ease: Socrates/Plato and Early Greek Perspectives
        • 2. Emotions as Sinful, Signs of the Fall, and Impediments to Salvation: Philo and Early Christian Theologians' Perspectives
        • 3. Emotions as Functional for Physiological Survival: Darwin and Evolutionary Science
        • 4. Emotions as Pathological, Signs of Dysfunction, and Indicators of Need: Sigmund Freud and Depth Psychology
        • 5. Emotions as Relational and Sociocultural Artifacts: Challenges to Natural Scientific Understandings

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