Abstract
In this essay, we tackle the misconception that panic is simply a state of being « overwhelmed
by your fear. » Panic, in our view, is not an extreme fear that necessarily pushes
the person into dysfunctional, counterproductive and irrational behaviors. On the contrary,
as we will try to show here, it is an emotion in its own right that has its own cognitive and
motivational functions. We will analyze panic here as a reaction to a danger perceived as
major, imminent and without clear solution, in the sense that the subject does not have
a determined action plan to react to the danger. Panic thus implies special access to
certain information or certain facts – a perception or apprehension of danger and its
precise properties – and it is in this that it has a cognitive function. On the motivational
level, we will defend the idea that panic involves tendencies to action appropriate to the
situation as it is perceived. Contrary to popular opinion and that of philosophers,we will
therefore propose away of conceiving panic as being able to be functional and thus, rational,
insofar as this emotion helps us to reach our goals given the means of which we
dispose. Contrary to what we might think, in some situations it is worth panicking.