Evidence from neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, and neuropsychology suggests that the experience of feelings in humans does not depend exclusively on structures of the cerebral cortex. It does not seem warranted to deny the possibility of feeling in animals on the grounds that their cerebral cortices are not comparable to those of humans
The experience of pain plays a crucial role in our daily life. In normal conditions, painful sensati...
The componential view of human emotion recognises that affective states comprise conscious, behaviou...
The componential view of human emotion recognises that affective states comprise conscious, behaviou...
Evidence from neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, and neuropsychology suggests that the experience of fee...
The experience of pain can be referred verbally by human subjects and, although this criterion is co...
Pain, while salient, is highly subjective. A sensation perceived as painful by one person may be per...
According to the IASP, an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or pote...
Both fear and pain can cause suffering. When pain is being studied, experiments must be designed to ...
The response to pain involves a non-conscious, reflexive action and a conscious perception. Accordin...
Many traditional attempts to show that nonhuman animals are deserving of moral consideration have t...
How an animal reacts to a sensory stimulus is often used to assess whether that animal can experienc...
Do nonhuman animals (henceforth, animals) have emotions, and if so, are these similar to ours? This ...
Much of the contention and confusion that seem inevitably to arise whenever the subject of pain in a...
All pain is unpleasant, but different perceptual and emotional qualities are characteristic of pain ...
PHILOSOPHERS may argue as to whether pain is a sensation or an emotion. As a sensation it has a thre...
The experience of pain plays a crucial role in our daily life. In normal conditions, painful sensati...
The componential view of human emotion recognises that affective states comprise conscious, behaviou...
The componential view of human emotion recognises that affective states comprise conscious, behaviou...
Evidence from neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, and neuropsychology suggests that the experience of fee...
The experience of pain can be referred verbally by human subjects and, although this criterion is co...
Pain, while salient, is highly subjective. A sensation perceived as painful by one person may be per...
According to the IASP, an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or pote...
Both fear and pain can cause suffering. When pain is being studied, experiments must be designed to ...
The response to pain involves a non-conscious, reflexive action and a conscious perception. Accordin...
Many traditional attempts to show that nonhuman animals are deserving of moral consideration have t...
How an animal reacts to a sensory stimulus is often used to assess whether that animal can experienc...
Do nonhuman animals (henceforth, animals) have emotions, and if so, are these similar to ours? This ...
Much of the contention and confusion that seem inevitably to arise whenever the subject of pain in a...
All pain is unpleasant, but different perceptual and emotional qualities are characteristic of pain ...
PHILOSOPHERS may argue as to whether pain is a sensation or an emotion. As a sensation it has a thre...
The experience of pain plays a crucial role in our daily life. In normal conditions, painful sensati...
The componential view of human emotion recognises that affective states comprise conscious, behaviou...
The componential view of human emotion recognises that affective states comprise conscious, behaviou...