In my cross-cultural psychology class, we learned about the emotion "schadenfreude": to take pleasure in someone else's misfortune.  If feeling this emotion goes against an individual's beliefs about themselves, i.e., that they are a good person, then isn't it possible that they would deny that they experienced this; doesn't this mean that our own personal experiences are not verifiable and therefore unknowable?        
                  
    
  
  
      Read another response by Allen Stairs, Gordon Marino
      Read another response about Emotion
    






