The book starts badly. Strongman asserts that the ideas of Aristotle, whose work actually dominated European thought for centuries, "did not last long at the time" (p. 6) and were ignored until the comparatively recent rise of "scientism." Authors of every Renaissance book on emotion I have read understood that they would be judged on their understanding of Aristotle, made clear their fealty to the master, and hoped their work would not be seen as too wide a departure from it. Darwin, whom Strongman claims to understand best from a 1992 review paper, is afforded half a page and trivialized for his dependence on Lamarckian theories of inheritance. Missed completely is the bare fact that it was Darwin who first pointed out that there is a finite group of basic families of emotion, each of which is characterized by a specific facial expression. Much of modern emotion research follows this lead. None of these early theories is worth summarizing, Strongman says, because of "the difficulty of giving an account of emotion which does not have a definite cognitive component" (p. 14).