Turner T J, Ortony A
Department of Psychology, University of Kentucky, Lexington 40506-0044.
Psychol Rev. 1992 Jul;99(3):566-71. doi: 10.1037/0033-295x.99.3.566.
The authors discuss some of the key points raised by Ekman (1992), Izard (1992), and Panksepp (1992) in their critiques of Ortony and Turner's (1990) suggestion that there are and probably can be no objective and generally acceptable criteria for what is to count as a basic emotion. A number of studies are discussed that are relevant to the authors' contention that a more promising approach to understanding the huge diversity among emotions is to think in terms of emotions being assemblages of basic components rather than combinations of other basic emotions. The authors stress that their position does not deny that emotions are based on "hardwired" biological systems. On the other hand, the existence of such systems does not mean that some emotions (such as those that appear on lists of basic emotions) have a special status. Finally, the authors note that Ekman, Izard, and Panksepp, in adopting different starting points for their research, arrive at rather different conclusions as to what basic emotions are and which emotions are basic. It is concluded that converging resolutions of these questions are improbable.
作者们讨论了埃克曼(1992年)、伊扎德(1992年)和潘克塞普(1992年)在批评奥托尼和特纳(1990年)的观点时提出的一些关键点,奥托尼和特纳认为对于什么可算作基本情绪,不存在且可能无法存在客观且普遍可接受的标准。文中讨论了一些研究,这些研究与作者的观点相关,即理解情绪间巨大差异的一个更有前景的方法是将情绪视为基本成分的组合,而非其他基本情绪的组合。作者们强调他们的立场并不否认情绪基于“固有”的生物系统。另一方面,此类系统的存在并不意味着某些情绪(如那些出现在基本情绪列表中的情绪)具有特殊地位。最后,作者们指出,埃克曼、伊扎德和潘克塞普在研究中采用了不同的出发点,因此对于什么是基本情绪以及哪些情绪是基本情绪得出了颇为不同的结论。得出的结论是,这些问题不太可能达成趋同的解决方案。