Ernst Tugendhat refers to Aristotle’s ideas in discussing Heidegger’s view of emotions as modes of relating oneself to oneself—through emo- tions one is confronted with one’s being in relation to a state of affairs which affects oneself. This confrontation is particularly clear in those affective states which are called moods (Stimmungen): states such as depression, cheerfulness, happiness, boredom, ill humour, and anxiety
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