The place of pain in life

Philosophy 80 (3):385-393 (2005)
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Abstract

In his ‘pains and Places’ (Philosophy 78, 2003), John Hyman is right that pains are not located in their causes or effects but in the hurting limbs. However, his position may be consonant with Wittgensteinian expressivism or the view that consciousness is the locus of pain: In producing its own parts, a living organism ‘autopoietically’ sustains itself as an activity functionally present in its limbs. It thus supplies the biological basis for pain consciousness as something wholly present in organs that hurt. (Published Online October 13 2005).

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Pain.Murat Aydede - 2019 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

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