An analysis of the two most extreme dissociation syndromes associated with the human experience of pain—pain without painfulness and pain without painfulness and what they can teach us about the complex nature of pain and its sensory, cognitive, and behavioural components.
The most extreme dissociation syndromes associated with the perception of pain in humans are pain without pain and painfulness without pain, which Nikola Grahek explores in his book Feeling Pain and Being in Pain. According to Grahek, these two syndromes—the complete separation of the affective, cognitive, and behavioural aspects of pain from its sensory dimension and its opposite, the separation of the affective aspects of pain from its sensory-discriminative aspects have a lot to teach us about the true nature and structure of human pain.
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