I've often wondered if human emotion is evolving. We have evidence in the world that our emotions are getting stronger. There is more violence, more sadness, more outrage. I really hope there is also more happiness, but our news and society doesn't seem to document too many happy events, if you think about it. So, how would we know?
I wonder at what point in evolution emotions were introduced. Of course, they started out with fear and anger as a method of survival. Love may have later developed as a way of protecting our children. But what does that say about animals that we claim have no emotions? Not all fish protect their young. Some are so dumb that they eat their own babies and eggs, and Evolution took care of that by having them lay thousands of eggs in the hope of just one surviving. Why does it seem that emotion is so inconsistent among species? And why are we so sure that we even understand it?
Some people say that alligators cannot love because they don't have a portion of their brain that provides feelings of love, but they do protect their young. We brush this off as simple instinct and survival. This is true, but I know very well that an alligator can "like" or "prefer" different people and situations. They even have stranger anxiety. Could alligators and other animals be evolving emotionally as their brains develop? Would there be any benefit for this to happen? If not, why were humans "given" such extensive emotions? Do we really need them?
I do feel that our emotions are primitve. We don't even understand them. We can't always control them. Some even deny and suppress them. What would be the evolutionary purpose of even giving this to us? Perhaps we wouldn't reproduce or care for our young. But why such a strong anger emotion? There isn't much around that is going to eat us, anymore. We've learned to control our environment, so isn't it time for evolution to slow down the anger and pump up the love? haha. I know, that sounds like a bad song, but I'm serious.
Emotion seems to be part of our downfall, to be honest.
I wonder at what point in evolution emotions were introduced. Of course, they started out with fear and anger as a method of survival. Love may have later developed as a way of protecting our children. But what does that say about animals that we claim have no emotions? Not all fish protect their young. Some are so dumb that they eat their own babies and eggs, and Evolution took care of that by having them lay thousands of eggs in the hope of just one surviving. Why does it seem that emotion is so inconsistent among species? And why are we so sure that we even understand it?
Some people say that alligators cannot love because they don't have a portion of their brain that provides feelings of love, but they do protect their young. We brush this off as simple instinct and survival. This is true, but I know very well that an alligator can "like" or "prefer" different people and situations. They even have stranger anxiety. Could alligators and other animals be evolving emotionally as their brains develop? Would there be any benefit for this to happen? If not, why were humans "given" such extensive emotions? Do we really need them?
I do feel that our emotions are primitve. We don't even understand them. We can't always control them. Some even deny and suppress them. What would be the evolutionary purpose of even giving this to us? Perhaps we wouldn't reproduce or care for our young. But why such a strong anger emotion? There isn't much around that is going to eat us, anymore. We've learned to control our environment, so isn't it time for evolution to slow down the anger and pump up the love? haha. I know, that sounds like a bad song, but I'm serious.
Emotion seems to be part of our downfall, to be honest.