ABSTRACT

'PLEASURE, satisfaction, or emotion are to be looked upon as accompaniments not causes,' says Pillsbury, 1 and this is the essence of the views of this group. Here emotion is viewed as an aspect, companion, or result of something else, rather like an adjective modifying a static noun, or an adverb modifying a dynamic verb. Emotion is only something secondary (Daly King), an epiphenomenon (Masserman), an after-effect (Malmud). It is in fact so secondary that a special psychology of emotion has no raison d'être (Cellérier 2 ).