While emotions are a part of the human experience and have definite value, it can easily be argued that they may not be as important as we tend to think. In his book, A General Theory of Emotion (2012), psychologist Robert Plutchik suggests that emotions are ways in which our mind organizes perceptions and memories into discrete categories. For example, if you hear screams one day and then see a mother pick up her child from a park the next day without any screaming, you may form an association between those two events. The same would happen with more positive events (such as hearing laughter one day followed by seeing someone raise their hands in celebration the next day).

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