Pain: Its Modes and Functions [Book Review]

Review of Metaphysics 15 (4):674-674 (1962)
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Abstract

The author--biologist, physiologist, and psychologist--shows the limitations of the all-too-scientific approaches to the human being, and argues effectively that "psychology requires an ontological interpretation of human existence." Psychology and philosophy must return to the living subject as their basis, the subject as self-and-context. The ultimate meaning of "physiological" pain lies in the person's disposition towards pain and his consequent reactions to its occurrence. Although he does not discuss abstract phenomenological principles, he works in an altogether phenomenological way, and throughout the book enlightens the continuous path between man, the object of scientific study, and man, the subject in an ethical world.--R. C. D.

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