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Disgust

2021
Article Summary Disgust is an aversive emotion with a marked visceral character that prompts one to recoil from objects that are foul, decaying, infectious, or corrupted. In its strongest forms, disgust can lead to nausea and vomiting. It also has milder versions, such as queasiness and distaste.
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A landscape of disgust

Science, 2018
Parasite avoidance behavior affects ecology and evolution in ways similar to predator ...
Sara B, Weinstein   +2 more
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Disgust sensitivity.

2020
This chapter addresses the "laws" that guide individuals' disgust responding and discusses how insight in these laws may contribute to our understanding of how disgust might contribute to the persistence of fearful preoccupations. It explains how disgust and fear may be related and why disgust-based concerns may sometimes give rise to extreme fear. The
de Jong, Peter J., Borg, Charmaine
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Varieties of disgust faces and the structure of disgust.

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1994
In 3 facial expression identification studies, college students matched a variety of disgust faces to verbally described eliciting situations. The faces depicted specific muscle action movements in accordance with P. Ekman and W. V. Friesen's (1978) Facial Action Coding System.
P, Rozin, L, Lowery, R, Ebert
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Disgust, Moral Disgust, and Morality

Journal of Moral Philosophy, 2015
This paper calls into question the idea that moral disgust is usefully regarded as a form of genuine disgust. This hypothesis is questionable even if, as some have argued, the spread of moral norms through a community makes use of signaling mechanisms that are central to core disgust.
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Nietzsche, Self-Disgust, and Disgusting Morality

The Journal of Nietzsche Studies, 2019
ABSTRACT This article addresses two topics related to disgust in the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche: (1) how moral disgust is harmful and (2) to what extent moral disgust is conditionally fitting. Nietzsche argues that self-disgust is dangerous because it is characteristic of ascetic morality.
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Understanding the emotion of disgust: disgust and psychopathology

2021
Early research on the emotion of disgust is centered on disgust emanating from the revulsion and withdrawal of oral consumption of contaminated objects (Angyal, 1941; Darwin 1872/1998). Recent studies, however, indicate that the emotion of disgust is far more expansive and can be separated into an action pattern (retraction of the upper lip, nose ...
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On “Disgust”

2014
Using the Natural Semantic Metalanguage (NSM) approach, this study explores conceptualisations of "disgust" in English via semantic analysis of descriptive adjectives (disgusted and disgusting) and interjections (Ugh! and Yuck!). As well as drawing out some subtle meaning differences between these expressions, this exercise establishes that there is no
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Disgust

2023
Abstract Conservatives in the 1790s responded with disgust to the egalitarian pressures democracy placed on the hierarchies of the existing social and political order. Disgust, like contempt, plays an important role in securing and maintaining status and class distinctions.
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Sexual disgust redux

The Psychoanalytic Review, 2018
This critique of Lawrence Josephs's paper on sexual disgust offers an alternate understanding of what is meant by the term "relational." To this end, the work of Georges Bataille is appropriated toward a relational understanding of sexual disgust, both as it relates to the content of the phenomenon and as a model for investigation.
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