Passions of the Soul

Passions of the Soul

In the treatise Passions of the Soul ("Les passions de l'âme"), the last of Descartes' published work, completed in 1649 and dedicated to Princess Elizabeth of Bohemia, the author contributes to a long tradition of theorizing "the passions." The passions were experiences often equated with or labeled as precursors to what are commonly called "emotions" in the Modern period. However, significant differences exist between what a passion putatively was and what an emotion allegedly is. For example, the passions, as suggested by the etymology of the word, were passive in nature; that is to say the experience of a passion was always caused by an object external to the subject. An emotion, as it is commonly rendered in both contemporary psychological discourse as well as popular culture, is usually explained as an event internal to, or taking place within, a subject. Therefore, an emotion is "produced" by the subject while a passion is "suffered" by the subject.

In the "Passions of the Soul", Descartes defines these phenomena as follows: " [P] erceptions or sensations or excitations of the soul which are referred to it in particular and which are caused, maintained, and strengthened by some movement of the spirits." [Hackett English edition, trans. Stephen H. Voss, 1989, p. 34] The "spirits" mentioned here are the "animal spirits" central to Descartes's account of physiology. They function similarly to how the medical establishment now understands the nervous system. Descartes explains that the animal spirits are produced by the blood and are responsible for stimulating the body's movement. By affecting the muscles, for example, the animal spirits "move the body in all the different ways in which it can be moved." [Hackett English edition, trans. Stephen H. Voss, 1989, p. 24]

Notable precursors to Descartes that articulated their own theories of the passions include St. Augustine and St. Thomas Aquinas.

ee also

* Balloonist theory

References


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