List
Facebook Twitter Reddit Tumblr Email

In “Feelings and phenomenal experiences” by Schwarz and Clore, in Social Psychology: Handbook of Basic Principles, they discuss the role of feelings in social behavior. They especially consider “feelings as a source of information.” They profile the literature concerning bodily experiences (e.g. hunger, pain, arousal), emotions (with a referent), moods (lacking a referent), “cognitive experiences” (e.g. surprise, boredom), “fluency” (including “processing fluency,” “perceptual fluency,” and “conceptual fluency,” none of which I have the time or space to explain). They explain that “central to the feelings-as-information approach is the assumption that people draw on their affective, cognitive and bodily experiences as a source of information” (pp. 385-386). This impacts areas such as judgment, memory, and “processing style.” The effects of feelings “depends on the specific task at hand and positive feelings can facilitate positive outcomes as well as negative ones (such as increased stereotyping and impaired logical problem solving)” (p. 398). This perspective is helpful in disputing the demand for a fully rationalized social science, and for its mere possibility. Affective knowledge, bodily experiences, and the technologies that mitigate their development and expression are not only important to consider, but also to affirm.

In When Technology Wounds, Chellis Glendinning related the role of feelings in the phenomenal experience of individuals harmed by technology. She considers their subjective experiences of those who were not only affectively, but also bodily experienced the trauma of toxins that maimed and disabled them. I tend to see a tendency among social scientists to identify the non-rational with the irrelevant. Emotive and bodily sensation is off the table as a legitimate or useful way of knowing. I tend to believe that this reflects the standpoint of one situated in a highly technological society: when one is surrounded by artifice and machinery, one sees the artificial and mechanical as the material more germane than emotional and bodily experiences. I am not surprised that those social scientists emerged in an environment in which 1-5% of the natural environment remains that they would make an argument in total seriousness that the artificial and natural are identical, and any separation is a completely social construction. Glendinning wrote that “As the world has become less organic and more dependent on techno-fixes for problems created by earlier techno-fixes, humans have substituted a new worldview for one once filled with clean rushing waters, coyotes, constellations of stars, tales of the ancestors, and people working together in sacred purpose.” The average social scientist would likely smugly disregard such a statement as nostalgic nonsense, bolstered by an essentialized and Romantic myth. But no doubt, our bodily and emotive experiences are an undeniable force in our lives, in how we form judgements.

Other social psychologists and ecopsychologists have conducted considerable research on the role of context, space and environment in affective responses. Glendinning’s point about the importance of the organic and of purpose may seem Romantic, but it’s also an empirical claim. It also happens to be fairly well supported by the building body of research.

  Posts

1 2 3 4 5 6 7
August 16th, 2012

The photographic symbol of the post-space age

Almost 46 years ago to the date, the Lunar Orbiter 1 spacecraft took the first satellite image of Earth from […]

June 3rd, 2012

Genetic modification of foods is a contemporary form of biopower

I have to admit that discussions of genetic modification of foods is an issue I’ve never been interested in addressing. […]

April 30th, 2012

Two tyrannies of vulgar praxis

Pragmatism is concerned with the unity of practice with philosophy, or more specifically of ascertaining by what one might measure […]

April 13th, 2012

Interview with McKenzie Wark

I just completed a fascinating interview with McKenzie Wark about his recent book, The Beach Beneath The Street: The Everyday […]

March 30th, 2012

In memory of Joel Olson

I just heard last night that my dear friend, Joel Olson, died. I’m still very out of sorts with all […]

December 2nd, 2011

On Technology and Human Agency

A perennial debate in technology studies is over the question of agency and determinism. Does technology drive history? Is technology […]

November 25th, 2011

Techno-utopians, then and now

“the wealth of networks is just as concentrated as financial wealth.”   Techno-utopianism has a history that extends beyond the […]

November 14th, 2011

Members of Occupy Albany Radical Caucus Arrested

On Friday, 26 members of Occupy Albany were arrested, and another 13 on Saturday. Eight of those arrested were members […]

November 9th, 2011

Autonomous Technics & Civilization: Mumford and Winner in conversation

In Technics & Civilization, among Mumford’s other work, he develops a rich historical account of technological development. Being “the last […]

November 3rd, 2011

Stage One: Occupy Public Space. What Next?

Stage One: Occupy Public Space. Occupy Together, an outgrowth of Occupy Wall Street, has seen tens of thousands of people […]