Current theories of emotion offer partial accounts of how affective states are generated, organized, and translated into purposive behavior. Discrete emotion theories identify categories of basic emotions; neurobiological accounts explain their physiological substrates; appraisal theories describe cognitive antecedents; and motivational theories treat affect as an energizing force. No single framework integrates these perspectives into a unified, clinically applicable model. This paper proposes such a model: the Functional Model of Emotion (FME). The FME defines emotion as a directional mechanism and feeling as a physiological energy state. Together, these constitute motivation, operationalized as Emotion + Feeling = Motivation. The model posits five primary emotions (Fear, Desire, Disgust, Anger, and Sadness), each initiating a discrete, sequential behavioral pathway oriented toward a goal, with Satisfaction and Relief functioning as terminal reinforcing states that resolve completed pathways. A hierarchical structure is proposed in which Fear holds primacy over other emotions, with resolution of Fear required before subordinate emotional states can direct behavior, in general. The model incorporates affective neuroscience, evolutionary psychology, behavioral learning theory, and social transmission mechanisms including emotional contagion. Clinical implications are discussed, with a note that cognitive dimensions of the model, including the relationship between thought, emotional intensity, perceived truth-value, and thought distortions and disorders, are addressed in a companion paper.
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Scott Costello
Synergy Health
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Scott Costello (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d34eac9c07852e0af98527 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19422556