Two types of togetherness in shared emotions (and in many other collectively intentional states)

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Two types of togetherness in shared emotions (and in many other collectively intentional states). / Salmela, Mikko.

In: Metodo, Vol. 10, No. 1, 31.10.2022, p. 49-78.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Salmela, M 2022, 'Two types of togetherness in shared emotions (and in many other collectively intentional states)', Metodo, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 49-78. https://doi.org/10.19079/metodo.10.1.49

APA

Salmela, M. (2022). Two types of togetherness in shared emotions (and in many other collectively intentional states). Metodo, 10(1), 49-78. https://doi.org/10.19079/metodo.10.1.49

Vancouver

Salmela M. Two types of togetherness in shared emotions (and in many other collectively intentional states). Metodo. 2022 Oct 31;10(1):49-78. https://doi.org/10.19079/metodo.10.1.49

Author

Salmela, Mikko. / Two types of togetherness in shared emotions (and in many other collectively intentional states). In: Metodo. 2022 ; Vol. 10, No. 1. pp. 49-78.

Bibtex

@article{a69c31a0413a419684a15fd47dc9ae7b,
title = "Two types of togetherness in shared emotions (and in many other collectively intentional states)",
abstract = "The paper introduces a distinction between sense of togetherness—hedonically neutral experience of togetherness—and feelings of togetherness—hedonically positive experiences of interpersonal liking, closeness, and rapport—as related but distinct experiences of togetherness that often occur together and intertwine in collectively intentional mental states and shared emotions in particular.Second-person engagement (Zahavi, 2019) and shared concerns (Salmela, 2012) are discussed as alternative foundations of the sense of togetherness, whereas feelings of togetherness are argued to emerge from a synchronization of the participants{\' } afective responses together with mutual awareness of their converging afects. Finally, a distinction between two types of feelings of togetherness, weak and strong, is introduced. Weak feelings of togetherness emerge from behavioural synchronization and they can be experienced without a sense of togetherness, whereas strong feelings of togetherness emerging frommutual awareness of afective convergence involve a sense of togetherness",
author = "Mikko Salmela",
year = "2022",
month = oct,
day = "31",
doi = "10.19079/metodo.10.1.49",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
pages = "49--78",
journal = "Metodo",
issn = "2281-9177",
publisher = "Svdig Press",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Two types of togetherness in shared emotions (and in many other collectively intentional states)

AU - Salmela, Mikko

PY - 2022/10/31

Y1 - 2022/10/31

N2 - The paper introduces a distinction between sense of togetherness—hedonically neutral experience of togetherness—and feelings of togetherness—hedonically positive experiences of interpersonal liking, closeness, and rapport—as related but distinct experiences of togetherness that often occur together and intertwine in collectively intentional mental states and shared emotions in particular.Second-person engagement (Zahavi, 2019) and shared concerns (Salmela, 2012) are discussed as alternative foundations of the sense of togetherness, whereas feelings of togetherness are argued to emerge from a synchronization of the participants ́ afective responses together with mutual awareness of their converging afects. Finally, a distinction between two types of feelings of togetherness, weak and strong, is introduced. Weak feelings of togetherness emerge from behavioural synchronization and they can be experienced without a sense of togetherness, whereas strong feelings of togetherness emerging frommutual awareness of afective convergence involve a sense of togetherness

AB - The paper introduces a distinction between sense of togetherness—hedonically neutral experience of togetherness—and feelings of togetherness—hedonically positive experiences of interpersonal liking, closeness, and rapport—as related but distinct experiences of togetherness that often occur together and intertwine in collectively intentional mental states and shared emotions in particular.Second-person engagement (Zahavi, 2019) and shared concerns (Salmela, 2012) are discussed as alternative foundations of the sense of togetherness, whereas feelings of togetherness are argued to emerge from a synchronization of the participants ́ afective responses together with mutual awareness of their converging afects. Finally, a distinction between two types of feelings of togetherness, weak and strong, is introduced. Weak feelings of togetherness emerge from behavioural synchronization and they can be experienced without a sense of togetherness, whereas strong feelings of togetherness emerging frommutual awareness of afective convergence involve a sense of togetherness

U2 - 10.19079/metodo.10.1.49

DO - 10.19079/metodo.10.1.49

M3 - Journal article

VL - 10

SP - 49

EP - 78

JO - Metodo

JF - Metodo

SN - 2281-9177

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 328889816