counteremotion

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From counter- +‎ emotion.

Noun[edit]

counteremotion (plural counteremotions)

  1. An emotion which acts in contrast or opposition to another emotion.
    • 1996, Dolf Zillmann, “Sequential Dependencies in Emotional Experience and Behavior”, in Emotion: Interdisciplinary Perspectives, page 265:
      The counteremotion of anger is serenity, that of fear relaxation.
    • 2009, Sebastian Faulks, A Week in December:
      He began to feel [...] the elation of money coming his way, the self-congratulation that followed – because the gain was all down to his inspired decisions — and then the almost equal counteremotion of sickening anxiety: a fear that there was some aspect of the trade he hadn't covered, some twist that even he had not foreseen.
    • 2011, Steven Pinker, The Better Angels of Our Nature, Penguin, published 2012, page 670:
      An aggressor experiences a revulsion to hurting his victim, but the discomfort cannot last forever, and eventually a reassuring, energizing counteremotion resets his equilibrium to neutral.