ABSTRACT

This is a book about cognition, emotion, memory, and learning. Along the way it examines exactly how implicit memory ("knowing how") and explicit memory ("knowing that") are connected with each other via the cerebellum. Since emotion is also related to memory, and most likely, one of its organising features, many fields of human endeavour have attempted to clarify its fundamental nature, including its relationship to metaphor, problem-solving, learning, and many other variables. This is an attempt to pull together the various strands relating to emotions, so that clinicians and researchers alike can identify precisely, and ultimately agree, upon what emotion is and how it contributes to the other known activities of mind and brain.

part I|57 pages

The Unconscious Revisited and Reconceptualized

part III|61 pages

More About Gene Activation, Spontaneity, and the Priming of Memory for Psychoanalytic Learning

part V|28 pages

Where we have Been

chapter Ten|26 pages

Review, summary, and conclussions