Emotions are not purely cognitive but involve bodily manifestations. Emotions are not separate centers but processes in sensory and motor centers. Emotions are combinations of ordinary sensory and motor processes
Western mental health has historically focused on nosology and symptom classification. Current taxonomies face criticism for bias and diagnostic reliability. No single biological marker or cognitive process links to specific diagnoses
We don't fully know the functions of dreaming. Some scientists view dreaming as an epiphenomenon during REM sleep. The Contemporary Theory of Dreaming suggests a broader connection-making process
Grief occurs in seven stages in a variable order. Everyone grieves differently, no specific order or timeline exists. No right or wrong way to grieve, but stages help understand process
Emotions consist of cognitive, feeling, motivational, somatic, and motor components. Theories disagree about the exact number and nature of emotional components. Emotions are defined by criteria like relevance to goals and positive/negative valence