
Affection shown between a
couple.
Affection is a "disposition or state of mind or
body" that is often associated with a feeling or type of
love. It has given rise to a number of branches of
philosophy and
psychology concerning: emotion (popularly: love,
devotion etc); disease; influence; state of being (philosophy); and
state of mind .
Usage
.jpg/300px-Smooches_(baby_and_child_kiss).jpg)
A kiss can express affection.
"Affection" is popularly used to denote a feeling or type of
love, amounting to more than goodwill or
friendship. Writers on
ethics generally use the word to refer to distinct
states of feeling, both lasting and spasmodic. Some contrast it
with
passion as being
free from the distinctively sensual element. More specifically the
word has been restricted to
emotional
states, the object of which is a person.
In the former sense,
it is the Greek "pathos" and as such it
appears in the writings of French
philosopher
René Descartes, Dutch
philosopher Baruch
Spinoza, and most of the writings of early British
ethicists. However, on various grounds (e.g., that it does
not involve anxiety or excitement and that it is comparatively
inert and compatible with the entire absence of the sensuous
element), it is generally and usefully distinguished from passion.
In this narrower sense the word has played a great part in ethical
systems, which have spoken of the social or parental
affections as in some sense a part of moral obligation.
For a consideration of these and similar problems, which depend
ultimately on the degree in which the affections are regarded as
voluntary, see
H. Sidgwick,
Methods of Ethics pp.
345–349.
Affectionate behavior
Numerous behaviors are used by people to express affection. Some
theories suggest that affectionate behavior evolved from parental
nurturing behavior due to its associations with hormonal rewards
with research verifying that expressions of affection, although
commonly evaluated positively, can be considered negative if they
pose implied threats to one's well being. Furthermore, affectionate
behavior in positively
valence
relationships may be associated with numerous health benefits.
Other, more loving type gestures of affectionate behavior include
obvious signs of liking a person.
Psychology
In psychology the terms
affection and
affective
are of great importance. As all intellectual phenomena have by
experimentalists been reduced to sensation, so all emotion has been
and is regarded as reducible to simple mental affection, the
element of which all emotional manifestations are ultimately
composed. The nature of this element is a problem that has been
provisionally, but not conclusively, solved by many psychologists;
the method is necessarily experimental, and all experiments on
feeling are peculiarly difficult. The solutions proposed are two.
In the first, all affection phenomena are primarily divisible into
those that are pleasurable and those that are the reverse. The main
objections to this are that it does not explain the infinite
variety of phenomena, and that it disregards the distinction that
most philosophers admit between higher and lower pleasures. The
second solution is that every sensation has its specific affective
quality, though by reason of the poverty of language many of these
have no name. W. Wundt,
Outlines of Psychology (trans. C. H.
Judd, Leipzig
, 1897),
maintains that we may group under three main affective directions,
each with its negative, all the infinite varieties in question;
these are (a) pleasure, or rather
pleasantness, and displeasure, (b) tension
and relaxation, (c) excitement and depression. These two
views are antithetic and no solution has been discovered.
American psychologist
Henry Murray
(1893–1988) developed a theory of
personality that was organized in terms of
motives, presses, and needs. According to Murray, these psychogenic
needs function mostly on the unconscious level, but play a major
role in our personality. Murray classified five affection
needs:
- Affiliation: Spending time with
other people.
- Nurturance: Taking care of another
person.
- Play: Having fun with
others.
- Rejection: Rejecting other
people.
- Succorance: Being helped or protected by
others
Two methods of experiment on affection have been tried:
- The first, introduced by A. Mosso, the Italian
psychologist, consists in recording the physical phenomena that
accompany modifications of the affective consciousness. Thus
it is found that the action of the heart is
accelerated by pleasant, and retarded by unpleasant, stimuli;
again, changes of weight and volume are found to accompany
modifications of affection—and so on. Apart altogether from the
facts that this investigation is still in its infancy and that the
conditions of experiment are insufficiently understood, its
ultimate success is rendered highly problematical by the essential
fact that real scientific results can be achieved only by data
recorded in connection with a perfectly normal subject; a conscious
or interested subject introduces variable factors that are probably
incalculable.
- The second is Fechner's method; it
consists of recording the changes in feeling-tone produced in a
subject by bringing him in contact with a series of conditions,
objects or stimuli graduated according to a scientific plan and
presented singly in pairs or in groups. The result is a comparative
table of likes and dislikes.
Mention should also be made of a third method that has hardly yet
been tried, namely, that of endeavouring to isolate one of the
three
directions by the method of suggestion or even
hypnotic trance observations.
See also
Further reading
For a contemporary text regarding the expression of affection, see:
- K. Floyd, "Communicating Affection: Interpersonal Behavior and
Social Context," Cambridge University Press, 2006
For the subject of emotion in general see modern textbooks of
psychology, e.g. those of
- J. Sully
- W. James
- G. T. Fechner
- O. Kulpe; Angelo Mosso, La Paura (Milan, 1884, 1900
Eng. trans. E. Lough and F. Kiesow, Lond. 1896)
- E. B. Titchener, Experimental Psychology (1905); art.
"Psychology" and works there quoted.
References
- affection - Definitions from
Dictionary.com
- 17th and 18th Century Theories of Emotions >
Francis Hutcheson on the Emotions (Stanford Encyclopedia of
Philosophy)
- according to Communication professor Kory Floyd of
Arizona State University