>From the Boston Globe 
>(http://www.boston.com/news/education/higher/articles/2007/04/29/hearts__minds/?page=full)

Antonio Damasio, a neuroscientist at USC, has played a pivotal role in 
challenging the old assumptions and establishing emotions as an important 
scientific subject. When Damasio first published his results in the early 
1990s, most cognitive scientists assumed that emotions interfered with rational 
thought. A person without any emotions should be a better thinker, since their 
cortical computer could process information without any distractions.

But Damasio sought out patients who had suffered brain injuries that prevented 
them from perceiving their own feelings, and put this idea to the test. The 
lives of these patients quickly fell apart, he found, because they could not 
make effective decisions. Some made terrible investments and ended up bankrupt; 
most just spent hours deliberating over irrelevant details, such as where to 
eat lunch. These results suggest that proper thinking requires feeling. Pure 
reason is a disease.

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