Documents found

  1. 24651.

    Budka, Philipp and Amatulli, Giuseppe

    Introduction

    Other published in Anthropologica (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 67, Issue 1, 2025

    Digital publication year: 2026

  2. 24652.

    Copublication LAREPPS, ARUC‐ISDC et CRISES

    2010

  3. 24654.

    Aubin, Jeffery, Dias Chaves, Julio Cesar, Johnston, Steve, Painchaud, Louis, Pasquier, Anne, Poirier, Paul-Hubert, Wees, Jennifer K. and Crégheur, Eric

    Littérature et histoire du christianisme ancien

    Other published in Laval théologique et philosophique (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 72, Issue 2, 2016

    Digital publication year: 2017

  4. 24655.

    Article published in Aestimatio (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 3, Issue 2, 2022

    Digital publication year: 2022

    More information

    This article applies approaches from current emotion research on material affective scaffolds—objects made and used to enhance, and more generally transform, affective states—to the emerging field of study focusing on emotions in ancient Near Eastern societies. Its main goal is to extend the framework of 4E cognition—with its central notion that human cognition is embodied, embedded, enactive, and extended—to the realm of affective states, emphasizing that through our bodily interactions with material objects we transform not just our cognitive processes but also our emotions, moods, and so forth. Thereby, the present study seeks to contribute to the exploration of the relationships between sensory experiences, emotions, moods, and the material world by investigating the affective meanings that material things acquire through people’s entanglements with them.The study focuses on one particular class of objects—Mesopotamian amulets from the first millennium BC, which served as bodily adornments but were also understood to have the power to evoke affective responses through their activation in ritual performances. Referring to scholarly compendia in Mesopotamian cuneiform texts, this study demonstrates that these objects were recommended by healing experts to influence different affective states, both in oneself and others. It examines the connection between affective states and specific material features of the amulet components (consisting of minerals, metals, and plant and animal substances). Finally, Mesopotamian views of affective states and their management are compared with those of contemporary cognitive-affective science. This comparison shows that although there are some analogies, there are also important differences that depend mainly on different understandings of the human mind and agency.

    Keywords: 4E-Cognition, Affective States, Emotions, Material Affective Scaffolds, Ancient Mesopotamian Healing Texts, Amulets

  5. 24656.

    Other published in Revue québécoise de droit international (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 14, Issue 2, 2001

    Digital publication year: 2023

  6. 24658.

    Other published in Revue d'histoire de l'Amérique française (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    1967

    Digital publication year: 2008

  7. 24659.

    Boyer, Marcel, Christoffersen, Peter, Lasserre, Pierre and Pavlov, Andrey

    Création de valeur, gestion de risque et options réelles

    Centre interuniversitaire de recherche en analyse des organisations (CIRANO)

    2003

  8. 24660.

    Boyer, Marcel, Christoffersen, Peter, Lasserre, Pierre and Pavlov, Andrey

    Value creation, risk management, and real options

    Centre interuniversitaire de recherche en analyse des organisations (CIRANO)

    2003