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happiness and sadness love and hate
The six primary emotions: surprise, interest, joy, anger, sadness, fear, and disgust all develop by six months of age.
Fear
Hope Fear Happiness Sadness Propathy AntipathyPerhaps there is more than one meaning for "primary emotions." In the context of emotions that could be combined to create any other emotions I could see those being a correct answer, but in Psychology, "primary emotions" are used to refer to culturally universal emotions which develop early in life due to mainly biological influences (for example, even blind children will smile when content, so it did not need to be learned):surprise, interest, joy, anger, sadness, fear, and disgust
narration and description
Learned emotions are love, guilt, shame . These are learned from the parents and something you are not born with. Emotional characteristics are responses to things or people in the environment and the capacity of emotions are within a person. Sadness, anger, fear, happiness are all primary emotions
According to Paul Eckman's List of Basic Emotions, the six basic emotions are anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness and surprise.According to Robert Plutchik's Wheel of Emotions, different emotions can blend into one another and create new emotions. Plutchik suggests 8 primary bipolar emotions: joy versus sadness; anger versus fear; trust versus disgust; and surprise versus anticipation.
Surprise, Fear, Anger, Disgust, Happiness, Sadness
The six primary emotions (arranged here as three pairs of opposite primary emotions) are Hope & Fear, Happiness & Sadness, Propathy & Antipathy. You can find out more about them at http://bit.ly/7iUrUh or http://www.wanterfall.com/Wf5Anatomy1.htmIn Psychology, the six primary emotions are not the emotions which can be combined to create other emotions, but rather the emotions that are culturally universal and develop within the first six months of life through mainly biologically programmed mechanisms: surprise, interest, joy, anger, sadness, fear, and disgust
primary
According to Paul Eckman's List of Basic Emotions, the six basic emotions are anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness and surprise.According to Robert Plutchik's Wheel of Emotions, different emotions can blend into one another and create new emotions. Plutchik suggests 8 primary bipolar emotions: joy versus sadness; anger versus fear; trust versus disgust; and surprise versus anticipation.