Antipodean pain. A phenomenological objection to Rorty

Authors

  • Agustín Serrano de Haro Sociedad Española de Fenomenología/ Instituto de Filosofía-CSIC

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5944/rif.4-I.2013.29751

Keywords:

pain, Rorty, affliction, physiology

Abstract

My paper tries to show that Rorty’s fiction of a scientifically developed civilization whose inhabitants should not feel pain as a first-person experience, but would grasp it rather as an objective state of their nervous system, is unsustainable from a phenomenological point of view. I point out several doubts concerning the facts that such an objective apprehension would be in an indefinite process of theoretical reconstruction, and that even in that other galaxy it could not be valid as the original pain situation (for example, among children). But then I focus on the principles that to have a physiological state cannot be equiva-lent to grasping it, and second that to grasp several objective features cannot be equivalent to suffering or to undergoing pain. I conclude by suggesting that Rorty’s eagerness to discard mental representations made him neglect the lived body as implied in everyday experience: the body, not the mind, comes to the fore in the experience of pain.

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Published

2014-01-15

How to Cite

Serrano de Haro, A. (2014). Antipodean pain. A phenomenological objection to Rorty. Investigaciones Fenomenológicas, (4-I), 313–330. https://doi.org/10.5944/rif.4-I.2013.29751

Issue

Section

Ensayos de las regiones euromediterranea y Europa del Norte