State Anxiety: the Precautionary Principle and the Role of Anticipated Fear in Ethic-political Decision Making

Authors

  • Mar Cabezas Facultad de Filosofía, Universidad de Salamanca

Abstract

States, as agents who make moral and political decisions, may also be influenced in decision making by emotions as fear, cognitive states as worry, expectations, etc. that will crystallize in the way they cope with the new challenging agenda. Bearing in mind that the argumentative debates about new risky technologies focus on the precautionary principle, and on an anticipated fear, this manuscript suggests to analyze the main biases that arise in the state anxiety (in attention, selection and evaluation of information, and memory) and vice versa, the different types of coping with anxiety depending of the styles of processing the information ( i.e. highly sensitive, highly anxious, repressive, and non-defensive); and will relate them to the different ways of interpreting the precautionary principle. Eventually, I will emphasize the advantages of a better knowledge of our emotional nature and an emotional education, also in political decision making.

Published

2012-05-31

How to Cite

Cabezas, M. (2012). State Anxiety: the Precautionary Principle and the Role of Anticipated Fear in Ethic-political Decision Making. Dilemata, (9), 153–174. Retrieved from https://dilemata.net/revista/index.php/dilemata/article/view/151