Emotional reactions depend on how we saw and understood the situation.
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Emotional reactions are emotional processes (states and movements) that have arisen in response to an external influence, an emotional response of the soul or body (organism).
You are happy — you are happy. You are scared — you are afraid …
Emotional reactions differ from emotional actions — states and movements where a person was proactive and was their author. Roughly, the ratio of emotional actions and reactions in a developed personality is 50/50, in a mass personality — 20/80. In creative children and developed adults, a significant part of emotions are emotional actions. Emotions in template adults are usually an involuntary and uncontrollable emotional reaction of the body to events occurring around. See The Theory of Social Psychoanalysis of Emotions
Types of emotional reactions
Emotional reactions can be both negative and positive, both innate and learned, they can be both operational and reactive.
The naturalness of emotional reactions
Emotional reactions usually proceed as automatisms and are felt as natural. At the same time, in reality, the process that organizes emotional reactions can be of varying degrees of complexity. In particular, prompt emotional reactions are highly dependent on how we saw and understood the situation. And perception is already a field of subjectivity…
If you don’t like bugs in a snack or eyes in soup, then these are not reflex emotions, but grafted or anchored emotions. Your neighbors crunch it with gusto.
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