• This is a comprehensive list of human emotions, categorized into general types and evaluated based on their potential benefit and detriment to humans. The emotions are grouped into three categories: generally positive, neutral, and generally negative. The table provides descriptions for each emotion, along with rankings for benefit (1-10) and detriment (1-10). Additionally, insightful essays on the potential value and dangers of each emotion are presented based on the provided table.

Provide a list that includes an extensive list of human emotions. Categorize the emotions into general types.


Create a table that, for each emotion, provides 1) a description, 2) a ranking of the emotion (1-10) in terms of its potential benefit to humans and 3) a ranking of the emotion (1-10) in terms of its potential detriment to humans.


Based on the table above, write up short, insightful, and colorful essays on the potential value and potential dangers of each emotion.


Create a table that categorizes the emotions into three categories: generally positive, neutral, and generally negative.



Phil Stilwell

Phil picked up a BA in Philosophy a couple of decades ago. After his MA in Education, he took a 23-year break from reality in Tokyo. He occasionally teaches philosophy and critical thinking courses in university and industry. He is joined here by ChatGPT, GEMINI, CLAUDE, and occasionally Copilot, Perplexity, and Grok, his far more intelligent AI friends. The seven of them discuss and debate a wide variety of philosophical topics I think you’ll enjoy.

Phil curates the content and guides the discussion, primarily through questions. At times there are disagreements, and you may find the banter interesting.

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