1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910820220303321

Autore

Grahek Nikola

Titolo

Feeling pain and being in pain / / Nikola Grahek

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Cambridge, Mass., : MIT Press, ©2007

©2007

ISBN

1-282-09716-4

9786612097164

0-262-27423-X

1-4294-6557-3

Edizione

[2nd ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (199 p.)

Disciplina

616/.0472

Soggetti

Pain

Pain perception

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

"A Bradford book."

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

""Contents""; ""Acknowledgments""; ""Foreword""; ""1 - Introduction""; ""2 - The Biological Function and Importance of Pain""; ""3 - Dissociation Phenomena in Human Pain Experience""; ""4 - Pain Asymbolia""; ""5 - How Is Pain without Painfulness Possible?""; ""6 - Conceptual and Theoretical Implications of Pain Asymbolia""; ""7 - Pain Quality and Painfulness without Pain""; ""8 - C-Fibers and All That""; ""References""; ""Index""

Sommario/riassunto

An examination of the two most radical dissociation syndromes of the human pain experience--pain without painfulness and painfulness without pain--and what they reveal about the complex nature of pain and its sensory, cognitive, and behavioral components.In Feeling Pain and Being in Pain, Nikola Grahek examines two of the most radical dissociation syndromes to be found in human pain experience: pain without painfulness and painfulness without pain. Grahek shows that these two syndromes--the complete dissociation of the sensory dimension of pain from its affective, cognitive, and behavioral components, and its opposite, the dissociation of pain's affective components from its sensory-discriminative components (inconceivable to most of us but documented by ample clinical



evidence)--have much to teach us about the true nature and structure of human pain experience.Grahek explains the crucial distinction betweenfeeling pain and being in pain, defending it on both conceptual and empirical grounds. He argues that the two dissociative syndromes reveal the complexity of the human pain experience: its major components, the role they play in overall pain experience, the way they work together, and the basic neural structures and mechanisms that subserve them.Feeling Pain and Being in Pain does not offer another philosophical theory of pain that conclusively supports or definitively refutes either subjectivist or objectivist assumptions in the philosophy of mind. Instead, Grahek calls for a less doctrinaire and more balanced approach to the study of mind-brain phenomena.