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Published in: Health Care Analysis 1/2019

Open Access 01-03-2019 | Original Article

Pain as the Perception of Someone: An Analysis of the Interface Between Pain Medicine and Philosophy

Author: Emmanuel Bäckryd

Published in: Health Care Analysis | Issue 1/2019

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Abstract

Based largely on the so-called problem of “asymmetry in concept application”, philosopher Murat Aydede has argued for a non-perceptual view of pain. Aydede is of course not denying basic neurobiological facts about neurons, action potentials, and the like, but he nonetheless makes a strong philosophical case for pain not being the perception of something extramental. In the present paper, after having stated some of the presuppositions I hold as a physician and pain researcher, and after having shortly described Aydede’s critique of perceptual theories of pain, I make a constructive proposal centred around the concept of pain as the perception of some-one, not some-thing. In doing so, I propose that there often is a problematic duality at work when we think about pain, namely the mental/extramental duality. This pre-reflective mindset creates difficulties when reflecting over pain. Instead, I propose the body/world duality as being more helpful. Two neologisms, cosmoception and egoception, are presented as an alternative to the twin concepts of exteroception and interoception. It is argued that the new concepts have the advantage of not pushing our thought into a mental/extra-mental dichotomy. Hence, when in pain (which is an instance of egoception), I get epistemic access to the body that is I, to how I fare in this world. From that perspective, pain is not the perception of something, but of someone–namely, the self. In the final part of the paper, this proposal is discussed in dialogue with a paper from phenomenological thinker Jennifer Bullington.
Footnotes
1
“Perceptual” here means the perception of an object “out there”, i.e., to use Aydede’s wording, epistemic access to something extra-mental (see below).
 
2
Many thanks to an anonymous reviewer, who made me aware of the pain/touch distinction being described by Hume: “The heat of a fire, when moderate, is suppos’d to exist in the fire; but the pain, which it causes upon a near approach, is not taken to have any being, except in the perception [13, p. 139).”
 
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Metadata
Title
Pain as the Perception of Someone: An Analysis of the Interface Between Pain Medicine and Philosophy
Author
Emmanuel Bäckryd
Publication date
01-03-2019
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Health Care Analysis / Issue 1/2019
Print ISSN: 1065-3058
Electronic ISSN: 1573-3394
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10728-018-0359-9

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