However, there is more to our concept of pain than its causal role, there is its qualitative character, how it feels; and what is left unexplained by the discovery of C-fiber firing is why pain should feel the way it does\ For there seems to be nothing... Feeling Pain and Being in Pain, second edition - Page 156by Nikola Grahek - 2011 - 198 pagesLimited preview - About this book
| Ned Block, Owen Flanagan, Guven Guzeldere - Psychology - 1997 - 884 pages
...implausibility) is why pain should feel the way it does! For there seems to be nothing about Cfiber firing that makes it naturally "fit" the phenomenal properties...makes the way pain feels into merely a brute fact. (p. 358) Levine maintains that psychophysical statements asserting such brute fact identities are unintelligible;... | |
| Valerie Gray Hardcastle - Biology - 1999 - 408 pages
...about any particular brain activity that makes it naturally "fit" the phenomenal properties of dreaming any more than it would fit some other set of phenomenal properties. The neuroscientific account of sleep leaves out what it is like to dream. 240 Thomas Polger and Owen... | |
| Thomas Metzinger - Consciousness - 2000 - 374 pages
...underpins this causal role. Nevertheless, there is a crucial difference between the two cases: However, there is more to our concept of pain than its causal...of the qualitative side of pain with C-fiber firing . . . leaves the connection between it and what we identify it with completely mysterious. One might... | |
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