The only word I can think of that resembles what you just typed is sentimental...colour me confused.
There are two 'main' methods of cooling a CPU/GPU.
1) The largest: air heatsinks. The best of them, at the moment, are the 'twin-tower' heatsinks such as the Noctua NH-D14. This is what your Intel/AMD Stock Cooler shall come under. Sub category - passive heatsinks. These are used to make your rig as silent, and potentially dust free, as possible.
2) The extravagant (potentially, at least): watercooling. Either single CPU loops, loops just for the graphics cards or a loop for your entire system. If done right, your rig looks awesome, should be damn near next to silent and should have great temps. The go-to for the modern enthusiast looking to make a stand-out rig. Does tend to cost a lot, however.
Then there's the more extreme methods:
1) LN2 (Liquid Nitrogen) or DICE (Dry Ice (CO2 in its solid state)). These are used for massive overclocks and NOT for 24/7 use. They require special equipment and precautions to be made before such a move is to be made, and it's only for those looking to get the most out of their chips for a short amount of time.
2) Phase changers. A machine compresses and cools a gas until it turns into a liquid, which is then pumped around to your CPU to cool it. Effective, but often noisy, expensive, prone to failure.
If it's not mentioned above, it's really not worth thinking about, and you really should keep to the first two. Scratch that; KEEP TO THE FIRST TWO!!