LISA FELDMAN BARRETT, Ph.D., is a University Distinguished
Professor of Psychology at Northeastern University, with
appointments at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General
Hospital in psychiatry and radiology. She received an NIH
Director's Pioneer Award for her research on emotion in the
brain.
"Fascinating . . . a thought-provoking journey into emotion
science."
-- Wall Street Journal
"I have never seen a book so devoted to understanding the
nature of emotions . . . the book is down-to-earth and a delight to
read. With a high level of knowledge and articulate style, Barrett
delivers a prime example of modern prose in digestible chunks."
--Seattle Book Review, five stars "Most of us make our
way through the world without thinking a lot about what we bring to
our encounters with it. Lisa Feldman Barrett does--and what she has
to say about our perceptions and emotions is pretty
mind-blowing."
-- Elle "Prepare to have your brain twisted around as psychology
professor Barrett takes it on a tour of itself . . . Her enthusiasm
for her topic brightens every amazing fact and theory about where
our emotions come from . . . each chapter is chockablock with
startling insights . . . Barrett's figurative selfie of the brain
is brilliant."
-- Booklist, starred review "A well-argued,
entertaining disputation of the prevailing view that emotion and
reason are at odds . . . Highly informative, readable, and
wide-ranging."
--Kirkus Reviews, starred review "Barrett
(psychology, Northeastern University) presents a new
neuroscientific explanation of why people are more swayed by
feelings than by facts. She offers an unintuitive theory that goes
against not only the popular understanding but also that of
traditional research: emotions don't arise; rather, we construct
them on the fly. Furthermore, emotions are neither universal nor
located in specific brain regions; they vary by culture and result
from dynamic neuronal networks. These networks run nonstop
simulations, making predictions and correcting them based on the
environment rather than reacting to it. Tracing her own journey
from the classical view of emotions, Barrett progressively builds
her case, writing in a conversational tone and using down-to-earth
metaphors, relegating the heaviest neuroscience to an appendix to
keep the book accessible. Still, it is a lot to take in if one has
not been exposed to these ideas before. Verdict: The
theories of emotion and the human brain set forth here are
revolutionary and have important implications. For readers
interested in psychology and neuroscience as well as those involved
in education and policy."
-- Library Journal, starred review "How Emotions Are
Made did what all great books do. It took a subject I thought I
understood--and turned my understanding upside down." -- Malcolm
Gladwell "This meticulous, well-researched, and deeply thought-out
book reveals new insights about our emotions--what they are, where
they come from, why we have them. For anyone who has struggled to
reconcile brain and heart, this book will be a treasure; it
explains the science without short-changing the humanism of its
topic."
-- Andrew Solomon, best-selling author of Far from the Tree and The
Noonday Demon "A brilliant and original book on the science of
emotion, by the deepest thinker about this topic since Darwin."
-- Daniel Gilbert, best-selling author of Stumbling on Happiness
"Ever wonder where your emotions come from? Lisa Barrett, a world
expert in the psychology of emotion, has written the definitive
field guide to feelings and the neuroscience behind them."
-- Angela Duckworth, best-selling author of Grit "We all harbor an
intuition about emotions: that the way you experience joy, fear or
anger happens automatically and is pretty much the same in a
Kalahari hunter-gatherer. In this excellent new book, Lisa Barrett
draws on contemporary research to offer a radically different
picture: that the experience of emotion is highly individualized,
neurobiologically idiosyncratic, and inseparable from cognition.
This is a provocative, accessible, important book."
-- Robert Sapolsky, author of Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers and A
Primate's Memoir "Everything you thought you knew about what you
feel and why you feel it turns out to be stunningly wrong. Lisa
Barrett illuminates the fascinating new science of our emotions,
offering real-world examples of why it matters in realms as diverse
as health, parenting, romantic relationships and national
security."
-- Peggy Orenstein, author of Girls & Sex "After reading How
Emotions Are Made, I will never think about emotions the same
way again. Lisa Barrett opens up a whole new terrain for fighting
gender stereotypes and making better policy."
-- Anne-Marie Slaughter, author of Unfinished Business "What if
everything you thought you knew about lust, anger, grief, and joy
was wrong? Lisa Barrett is one of the psychology's wisest and most
creative scientists and her theory of constructed emotion is
radical and fascinating. Through vivid examples and sharp, clear
prose, How Emotions Are Made defends a bold new vision of
the most central aspects of human nature."
-- Paul Bloom, author of Against Empathy and How Pleasure Works
"Lisa Barrett writes with great clarity about how your emotions are
not merely about what you're born with, but also about how your
brain pieces your feelings together, and how you can contribute to
the process. She tells a compelling story."
-- Joseph LeDoux, author of Anxious and Synaptic Self "How
Emotions Are Made offers a grand new conception of
emotions--what they are, where they come from, and (most
importantly) what they aren't. Brain science is the art of the
counterintuitive and Lisa Barrett has a remarkable capacity to make
the counterintuitive comprehensible. This book will have you
smacking your forehead wondering why it took so long to think this
way about the brain."
-- Stuart Firestein, author of Failure: Why Science Is So
Successful and Ignorance: How It Drives Science "How Emotions
Are Made is a provocative, insightful, and engaging analysis of
the fascinating ways that our brains create our emotional lives,
convincingly linking cutting-edge neuroscience studies with
everyday emotions. You won't think about emotions in the same way
after you read this important book."
-- Daniel L. Schacter, author of The Seven Sins of Memory "Lisa
Barrett masterfully integrates discoveries from affective science,
neuroscience, social psychology, and philosophy to make sense of
the many instances of emotion that you experience and witness each
day. How Emotions Are Made will help you remake your life,
giving you new lenses to see familiar feelings--from anxiety to
love--anew."
-- Barbara Fredrickson, author of Positivity and Love 2.0 "How
Emotions Are Made is a tour de force in the quest to understand how
we perceive, judge and decide. It lays the groundwork to address
many of the mysteries of human behavior. I look forward to how this
more accurate view of emotion will help my clients in athletics and
trading."
-- Denise K. Shull, M.A., founder and CEO of The ReThink Group
"With How Emotions Are Made, Lisa Feldman Barrett has set
the terms of debate for emotion theory in the twenty-first century.
In clear, readable prose, she invites us to question both lay and
expert understandings of what emotions are--and she musters an
impressive body of data to suggest new answers. Barrett's theory of
how we construct emotions has major implications for law, including
the myth of dispassionate judging. Her 'affective science manifesto
for the legal system' deserves to be taken seriously by theorists
and practitioners alike."
-- Terry Maroney, professor of law and professor of medicine,
health and society, Vanderbilt University "Every lawyer and judge
doing serious criminal trials should read this book. We all grapple
with the concepts of free will, emotional impulses, and criminal
intent, but here these topics are exposed to a new scrutiny and old
assumptions are challenged. The interface of law and brain science
is suddenly the area we ought to be debating."
-- Baroness Helena Kennedy QC, House of Lords "Extraordinarily well
written, Lisa Barrett's How Emotions Are Made chronicles a
paradigm shift in the science of emotion. But more than just a
chronicle, this book is a brilliant work of translation,
translating the new neuroscience of emotion into understandable and
readable terms. Since that science has profound implications in
areas as disparate as police shootings and TSA profiling, the
translation is critical for scientists and citizens, lawmakers and
physicians. (For example, what if there is no meaningful scientific
difference between premeditated murder, the product of rational
thought, which we consider most culpable, and the lesser offense of
manslaughter, a 'crime of passion'?) Emotions do not reside in
dedicated brain areas, constantly at war with areas charged with
cognition or perception, as Pixar caricatured it in Inside
Out, let alone the brain described by Descartes or Plato or
other philosophers. Nor does the brain passively retrieve data from
"outside," to which it reacts. The brain constructs the reality it
perceives and the emotions it (and we) experience using core brain
systems, not specialized circuits. And it does so in concert with
other brains, with the culture surrounding it. The implications of
this work ('only' challenging two-thousand-year-old assumptions
about the brain) and its ambitions are nothing short of stunning.
Even more stunning is how extraordinarily well it succeeds."
-- Nancy Gertner, senior lecturer on law, Harvard Law School, and
former U.S. federal judge for the United States District Court of
Massachusetts
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