I personally think this is bull, no offense. If our emotional states correspond to chemical balances in our brain, than of course the chemical balances are going to vary with every emotional state. For example, I'm pretty sure if someone is sad or angry, the chemical balance in their brain is going to be different from when they're happy. Does this imply that a pill should be prescribed when ever the chemical balance deviates from its state during happiness?
BluRayHiDef
You don't understand how the brain works. Emotions are chemicals and electrical impulses. When anger occurs, that is a natural reaction in the brain, outrage that has developed over millions of years, outrage that preserved our ancestors. Happiness, is considered the disposition in neurology. The natural state. Sadness, jealousy, lust, confusion, are all normal, well-studied chemical reactions that our brains are known to replicate on an almost frighteningly predictable level given generic circumstances. An imbalance marks something awry, a brain's incapablity to experience happiness, a brain that ONLY experiences sadness, no matter what. Unless it is corrected, through medicines, that do restore these balances. How exactly else would the research and production of such pills work, if we did not document such imbalances and create means to correct them? How else is medicine created? A pill of pixie dust that gives one a sugar rush, thus giving an illusion of happiness? No, as diabetics have an insulin imbalance, and we correct that, genuine depressives have a flawed brain, that does not produce emotion in an orderly, sound way. Similarly, we can look to Bi-Polar disorder, another classic example of brain chemisty gone turbulent.
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