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  2. Pain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pain

    Pain evoked by the A-delta fibers is described as sharp and is felt first. This is followed by a duller pain—often described as burning—carried by the C fibers. [48] These A-delta and C fibers enter the spinal cord via Lissauer's tract and connect with spinal cord nerve fibers in the central gelatinous substance of the spinal cord.

  3. Suffering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suffering

    The word suffering is sometimes used in the narrow sense of physical pain, but more often it refers to psychological pain, or more often yet it refers to pain in the broad sense, i.e. to any unpleasant feeling, emotion or sensation. The word pain usually refers to physical pain, but it is also a common synonym of suffering.

  4. Desensitization (psychology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desensitization_(psychology)

    Desensitization works best when individuals are directly exposed to the stimuli and situations they fear, so anxiety-evoking stimuli are paired with inhibitory responses. This is done either by clients performing in real-life situations (vivo desensitization) or, if it is not practical to directly act out the steps of hierarchy, by observing ...

  5. Pain empathy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pain_empathy

    Sensorimotor contagion takes place when corticospinal excitability reduces due to observing another person experiencing pain. A study by Avenanti on pain empathy in racial bias showed that when a person sees a needle being poked into the hand of another person, there is a reduced motor evoked potential in the muscle of the observer's hand. [14]

  6. Emotion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotion

    Another neurological approach proposed by Bud Craig in 2003 distinguishes two classes of emotion: "classical" emotions such as love, anger and fear that are evoked by environmental stimuli, and "homeostatic emotions" – attention-demanding feelings evoked by body states, such as pain, hunger and fatigue, that motivate behavior (withdrawal ...

  7. Stoic passions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stoic_Passions

    The Greek word pathos was a wide-ranging term indicating an infliction one suffers. [2] The Stoics used the word to discuss many common emotions such as anger, fear and excessive joy. [ 3 ] A passion is a disturbing and misleading force in the mind which occurs because of a failure to reason correctly. [ 2 ]

  8. ‘You can overcome the fear of pain’: Why Marina Abramović ...

    www.aol.com/overcome-fear-pain-why-marina...

    Abramović, who has just turned 77, describes her body as her tool. She has tested it in almost every way possible in the name of art, enduring vast amounts of pain and once even losing ...

  9. Fear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fear

    Another categorization was proposed by Archer, [9] who, besides conditioned fear stimuli, categorized fear-evoking (as well as aggression-evoking) stimuli into three groups; namely, pain, novelty, and frustration, although he also described "looming", which refers to an object rapidly moving towards the visual sensors of a subject, and can be ...