Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1 What is Emotion? Emotion as Feeling or What James Got Right 1.1 Introduction 1.2. Theories of Emotion 1.2.1 William James and Bodily Feelings 1.2.2 Intentionality and Judgment 1.
3 "Modified Jamesians" 1.4 Conclusion Chapter 2 Inside and Out: Emotions are Multisensory Interoceptive/Exteroceptive Perceptions 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Representationalism 2.3 A Multisensory Perceptual Theory of Emotion 2.3.1 Preliminaries 2.3.
2 Alternative Perceptual Theories 2.3.3 Emotions as Multisensory Perceptions 2.3.4 Emotions as Multisensory Exteroceptive and Interoceptive Perceptions 2.3.5 The Theory of Constructed Emotion 2.4 Objections 2.
5 Conclusion Chapter 3 Ties that Bind: Emotions are Natural Kinds 3.1 Introduction 3.2. Natural Kinds 3.3 Emotions and Affect Programs 3.3.1 Facial expressions 3.3.
2 Autonomic changes 3.3.3 Elicitors 3.4 Barrett's critique - death by a thousand cuts 3.4.1 Weak Correlations 3.4.2 Ecological Validity 3.
5 Griffith's Eliminativism Chapter 4 A Teleosemantic Account of Emotions and Their Functions 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Functions 4.3. Teleosemantics and Evolution 4.4 Disambiguating Questions 4.5 Conclusion Chapter 5 Cooperation, Commitment, or Culture: How Emotions May Have Evolved 5.1 Introduction 5.
2 Ledoux on Fear 5.3 Cosmides and Tooby on Emotion; Buss on Jealousy 5.4 Trivers on Reciprocal Altruism 5.5 Boyd, Richerson, Bowles, and Gintis on Cultural Group Selection 5.6 Frank on commitment devices 5.7 Emotions and their functions redux Chapter 6 Pressing Out: Emotional Expression as Designed Showing 6.1. Introduction 6.
2 Darwin on Expression: Going the Whole Orang 6.3 What Exactly is Expression? 6.4 Expression as designed showing 6.5 Objections to Green's Account 6.5.1 Expression without self-expression 6.5.2 Expression, reporting, and showing-that 6.
5.3 Self-expression and expressivism 6.6 Artifact Expression and Artworks 6.7 Conclusion Chapter 7 Wise Choices or Apt Feelings? A Hybrid Expressivist View of Moral Judgment 7.1 Introduction 7.2 Sentimentalism 7.3. Philosophical Stage-Setting 7.
4 Empirical Evidence 7.4.1 The Emotional Brain 7.4.2 Incidental Disgust 7.4.3 Moral Dumbfounding 7.4.
4 Psychopathy 7.5 Emotion, the moral problem, and expressivism 7.6 Conclusion.