TL;DR: The authors argued that rational decisions are not the product of logic alone - they require the support of emotion and feeling, drawing on his experience with neurological patients affected with brain damage, Dr Damasio showed how absence of emotions and feelings can break down rationality.
Abstract: Descartes' Error offers the scientific basis for ending the division between mind and body. Antonio Damasio contends that rational decisions are not the product of logic alone - they require the support of emotion and feeling. Drawing on his experience with neurological patients affected with brain damage, Dr Damasio shows how absence of emotions and feelings can break down rationality. He also offers a new perspective on what emotions and feelings actually are: a direct view of our own body states; a link between the body and its survival-oriented regulation on the one hand, and consciousness on the other. Written as a conversation between the author and an imaginary listener, Descartes' Error leads us to conclude that human organisms are endowed from their very beginning with a spirited passion for making choices, which the social mind can then use to build rational behaviour.
TL;DR: Results from four studies involving more than 900 participants from different populations supported the proposed conceptualization of two types of passion: obsessive and harmonious.
Abstract: Passion is defined as a strong inclination toward an activity that people like, that they find important, and in which they invest time and energy Two types of passion are proposed: obsessive and harmonious Obsessive passion (OP) refers to a controlled internalization of an activity in one's identity that creates an internal pressure to engage in the activity that the person likes Harmonious passion (HP) refers to an autonomous internalization that leads individuals to choose to engage in the activity that they like HP promotes healthy adaptation whereas OP thwarts it by causing negative affect and rigid persistence Results from four studies involving more than 900 participants from different populations supported the proposed conceptualization
TL;DR: A triangular theory of love is proposed in this paper, where the authors argue that love has three components: intimacy, which encompasses the feelings of closeness, connectedness, and bondedness one experiences in loving relationships; passion, which represents the drives that lead to romance, physical attraction, and sexual consummation; and decision/commitment, which describes the decision that one loves another, and in the long term, the commitment to maintain that love.
Abstract: This article presents a triangular theory of love According to the theory, love has three components: (a) intimacy, which encompasses the feelings of closeness, connectedness, and bondedness one experiences in loving relationships; (b) passion, which encompasses the drives that lead to romance, physical attraction, and sexual consummation; and (c) decision/commitment, which encompasses, in the short term, the decision that one loves another, and in the long term, the commitment to maintain that love The amount of love one experiences depends on the absolute strength of these three components, and the kind of love one experiences depends on their strengths relative to each other The three components interact with each other and with the actions that they produce and that produce them so as to form a number of different kinds of loving experiences The triangular theory of love subsumes certain other theories and can account for a number of empirical findings in the research literature, as well as for a number of experiences with which many are familiar firsthand It is proposed that the triangular theory provides a rather comprehensive basis for understanding many aspects of the love that underlies close relationships What does it mean "to love" someone? Does it always mean the same thing, and if not, in what ways do loves differ from each other? Why do certain loves seem to last, whereas others disappear almost as quickly as they are formed? This article seeks to answer these and other questions through a triangular theory of love This tripartite theory deals both with the nature of love and with loves in various kinds of relationships The presentation of the theory will be divided into three main parts In the first part, the main tenets of the theory will be explained and discussed, and the theory will be compared with other theories of love In the second part, the implications of the theory for close relationships and satisfaction in them will be described In the third part, the theory will be shown to account for many of the empirical phenomena that have been observed with regard to love
TL;DR: The Open Society and its Enemies by K. R. Popper as mentioned in this paper is a book of great length (444 pages of text), great learning (168 pages of notes), but not of commensurate understanding.
Abstract: THIS is a book of great length (444 pages of text), great learning (168 pages of notes), but not of commensurate understanding. It is a pity, because its defects may conceal its undoubted merits. When Dr. Popper is not caricaturing writers whose views he dislikes-and he dislikes a great many-he has a useful contribution to make to political thought, and his general moral theory (mainly to be found in the notes) is eminently sane and sensible. But for his passion for tilting at windmills he would have written a better and shorter book. The Open Society and its Enemies By K. R. Popper. Vol. 1: The Spell of Plato. Pp. vii + 268. Vol. 2: The High Tide of Prophecy—Hegel, Marx and the Aftermath. Pp. v + 352. (London: George Koutledge and Sons, Ltd., 1945.) 2 vols., 42s. net.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors build on fragmented and disparate extant work to conceptualize the nature of entrepreneurial passion associated with salient entrepreneurial role identities, and also theorize the mechanisms of the experience of entrepreneurial experience that provide coherence to goal-directed cognitions and behaviors during the pursuit of entrepreneurial effectiveness.
Abstract: Entrepreneurial passion plays an important role in entrepreneurship, but theoretical understanding of what it is and what it does is lacking. We build on fragmented and disparate extant work to conceptualize the nature of entrepreneurial passion associated with salient entrepreneurial role identities. We also theorize the mechanisms of the experience of entrepreneurial passion that provide coherence to goal-directed cognitions and behaviors during the pursuit of entrepreneurial effectiveness.