Career
After graduating fromResearch
Lazarus advocated the importance of emotion, especially what he described as the marriage between emotion and thought. His views put him at odds not only with behaviorism but also with a movement that began toward the end of his career: attempts to explain all human behavior by looking at the structure of the brain. He was very opposed to reductionist approaches to understanding human behavior. Lazarus' cognitive-mediational theory maintained that the interaction between emotion-eliciting conditions and coping processes affect the cognitions that drive emotional reactions. For example, the degree of a perceived threat affects an individual's emotional and psychological response to such life events in the future. At the heart of Lazarus's theory was what he called appraisal. Before emotion occurs, he argued, people make an automatic, often unconscious, assessment of what is happening and what it may mean for them or those they care about. From that perspective, emotion becomes not just rational but a necessary component of survival. According to Lazarus, there are two kinds of appraisal: ''primary appraisal'', which is aimed at establishing the significance of an event's meaning to the organism; and, ''secondary appraisal'', which assesses the ability of the organism to cope with the consequences of the event. Lazarus worked on topics such as hope and gratitude. He was perhaps best known for his work with Susan Folkman onEmotion definition
Lazarus (1991) defines emotions according to ' core relational themes' which are intuitive summaries of the 'moral appraisals' (e.g. of relevance, goal conduciveness) involved in different emotions. These themes help define both the function and eliciting conditions of the emotion. They include: *Anger - a demeaning offense against me and mine. *Fear - facing an immediate, concrete, and overwhelming physical danger. *Sadness - having experienced an irrevocable loss. *Disgust - taking in or being too close to an indigestible object or idea (metaphorically speaking). *Happiness - making reasonable progress toward the realization of a goal.Known publications
*''Adjustment and Personality'', 1961 *''Personality and adjustment'', 1963, Englewood Cliffs, N.J: Prentice-Hall. *''The Nature of Psychological Inquiry'', 1964 *''Psychological stress and the coping process'', 1966, New York: McGraw-Hill. *''Personality'', 1971, (2nd edition) Englewood Cliffs, N.J: Prentice-Hall. *''Patterns of adjustment and human effectiveness'', 1968, New York: McGraw-Hill. *''Patterns of adjustment'', 1976, (3rd edition), New York: McGraw-Hill. *"A cognitively oriented psychologist looks at biofeedback". ''American Psychologist''. 30 (5), 553-561 *"On the primacy of cognition". ''American Psychologist'', 1984. 39 (2) 124-129 *''The riddle of man: An introduction to psychology'', Englewood Cliffs, N.J: Prentice-Hall. *''Emotion and adaptation'', 1991, New York: Oxford University Press. *''The life and work of an eminent psychologist'', 1998, New York: Springer. *''Coping with aging'', 2005, Oxford University Press, USA (December 23, 2005) *with Monat, Alan ''Personality'', 1979, (3rd edition) Englewood Cliff, N.J.: Prentice-Hall. *with Folkman, Susan ''Stress, appraisal, and coping'', 1984, New York: Springer Pub. Co *with Folkman, Susan ''Manual for the Hassles and uplifts scales Research edition.'', 1989, Palo Alto, Calif.: Consulting Psychologists Press. *"Why We Should Think of Stress as a Subset of Emotion", in ''Handbook of Stress: Theoretical and Clinical Aspects'', 2nd ed., L Goldberger and S. Breznitz (ed), New York, N.Y., Free Press, 1993. *with Lazarus, Bernice N ''Passion and Reason: Making Sense of Our Emotions'', 1994, Passion and reason: Making sense of our emotions New York: Oxford University Press *''Fifty years of the research and theory of R.S. Lazarus: An analysis of historical and perennial issues'', 1998, Mahwah, N.J.: Lawerence Erlbaum Associates. *''Stress and emotion: A new synthesis'', 1999, New York: Springer Pub. Co. *''Stress Treatment and Management'' (2 Volumes), volume one volume twoReferences