Neuropsychology and the cognitive nature of the emotions

Abstract
We examine and criticise some interpretations of the neuropsychology of the emotions, arguing that emotion and cognition should not be distinguished as distinct entities that can occur independently or be separated physiologically. In the twentieth century the separation of the cognitive from the emotional and the sensory has been challenged within philosophy, psychology, and now neuroscience. Centrifugal anatomical wiring suggests that emotion and sensation cannot be independent from cognition. For emotions to function adaptively, they must incorporate interpretation, anticipation, and problem-solving, a view we call functionalism. Neuropsychological data on the emotions are consistent with these assertions.