Logic vs. emotion...
Logic is not superior to emotion when it comes to the best outcomes and drawing correct conclusions.
However, logic doesn’t dictate what “best outcomes” are. If “it makes me happy” is my desired outcome, then my reasoning has to work towards conclusions that inform my decisions about finding happiness. Money and what money buys makes me happy. In order to acquire money and things, I must produce something that I can exchange for money. I possess the ability and qualifications for teaching. Teachers get paid. Money makes me happy. If I teach, I earn money. Therefore, teaching makes me happy.
Everything you do in life falls on your preferences and biases. Your thinking is primarily motivated by how you immediately feel about something. To step away from that, you have to be more concerned with longer-range outcomes, thinking more oriented towards ethics/morality, spiritual consequences, temporal impact vs eternal, etc., etc. What SHOULD I do? What SHOULD I think or feel? Is it right? Is it good? Is it beautiful? How do I know if it’s good or beautiful?
I think when you reach a level of thinking more long-range in line with your own sense of identity, it gets easier to shove emotion further and further into the background. You know ULTIMATELY what keeps you healthy, or what makes you happy, and you take logical steps to remain consistent within your measure of happiness or good. You can view things like good, or beauty, as objective things rather than subjective because you are able to adopt a reliable standard. Nature, for instance, is a consistent model for a standard of beauty—harmonic series, Fib series, etc. represented musically produces beautiful music. When musical elements work together with themes that are uplifting and encouraging, the effect is satisfying. Musical elements that have freedom and equality IMPOSED on them, together with depictions of human beings as fools, always comes across as disturbing or even horrific. Preferences for right/wrong, good/evil, beauty/horror are emotional, whereas right/good/beauty and their opposites are objective. But once a preference is expressed, the best decisions towards achieving objectives are logical, objective decisions.