Comment author:Alicorn
02 August 2009 08:49:01PM
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2 points
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Anything that diverts your attention from without would be bad for the same reason: a sudden movement, the commencement of some noise, a change in temperature, an adjustment of the ambient light, celery suddenly tasting like sugar cane. That does not make these things bad. It makes them attention-getting. Pain is attention-getting, but that can't be all there is to it.
Comment author:Alicorn
03 August 2009 05:38:32AM
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1 point
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What about brief pains, then? If I touch something that's built up a static charge and it shocks me and I experience a moment of pain, it quite promptly "lets go". Why does that situation seem worse than the situation in which I touch something that has built up a static charge and experience the scent of roses, or the sound of a flute, for that same moment?
Comments (195)
Anything that diverts your attention from without would be bad for the same reason: a sudden movement, the commencement of some noise, a change in temperature, an adjustment of the ambient light, celery suddenly tasting like sugar cane. That does not make these things bad. It makes them attention-getting. Pain is attention-getting, but that can't be all there is to it.
It gets attention and WON'T LET GO.
What about brief pains, then? If I touch something that's built up a static charge and it shocks me and I experience a moment of pain, it quite promptly "lets go". Why does that situation seem worse than the situation in which I touch something that has built up a static charge and experience the scent of roses, or the sound of a flute, for that same moment?