The study of emotions, particularly within the field of affective neuroscience, is a complex field riven by paradigmatic division. In my book Shadowing the Anthropocene, I proposed a way to engage with one’s experience, including one’s emotional or affective experience, within an “eco-ethico-aesthetic” (or “logo-ethico-aesthetic”) practice that could help us deal with the “Anthropocene predicament.” […]
Posts Tagged ‘Lisa Feldman Barrett’
Emotional practices, part 1: Affective neuroscience
Posted in Philosophy, Spirit matter, tagged affect theory, affective neuroscience, Charles Hampden-Turner, constructionism, constructivism, emotions, G. I. Gurdjieff, Lisa Feldman Barrett, neurophenomenology, neuropolitics, neuropsychology, politics of affect, practices of the self, Rami Gabriel, Stephen Asma on August 16, 2020 | 4 Comments »
Categories
- Academe (108)
- Anthropocene (75)
- Blog stuff (52)
- Cinema (88)
- Climate change (75)
- Cultural politics (45)
- Eco-culture (174)
- Eco-theory (55)
- Manifestos & auguries (41)
- Media ecology (120)
- Music & soundscape (39)
- Philosophy (261)
- Politics (166)
- Process-relational thought (101)
- Science & society (36)
- Spirit matter (128)
- Uncategorized (57)
- Visual culture (88)
Translate
Archives
Subscribe to Blog via Email
Subscribe2
Top Posts & Pages
Popular resources
Lyme disease & beyond: a bibliographic resourceHumming the New Earth (on the "global Hum")
33⅓ Environmental Studies greats (or, a canon revisited) (2015)
Books of the decade in ecocultural theory, 2020
Books of the decade in ecocultural theory, 2010
Between Continental and environmental philosophy (2009)
Books & articles
Selected interviews, talks, music
Apocalyptic Anxieties, SFU, 2023
SFU Global Humanities interview
KCSB Selectric Davyland interview
The Zone is Us (Vermont Humanities, 2022)
What’s on my Bandcamp music page
Soundcloud playlist (music sampler)
Krista Tippett On Being (Speaking of Faith) interview
Associated sites
Immanence on Facebook
- This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States license.