(November 22, 2024 at 8:25 pm)Belacqua Wrote:(November 22, 2024 at 5:13 pm)Sheldon Wrote: Also worth noting that pain is not just subjective, but relative, since we are all born with differing pain thresholds. Very occasionally people are born with no pain threshold at all, and can feel no pain.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-h...s-47719718
"Jo Cameron only realises her skin is burning when she smells singed flesh. She often burns her arms on the oven, but feels no pain to warn her.
That's because she is one of only two people in the world known to have a rare genetic mutation.
It means she feels virtually no pain, and never feels anxious or afraid."
And of course whilst we are born with a pain threshold we cannot alter, parenthetically we can alter our pain tolerance.
Maybe she's just a very good liar @Belacqua? Then again...
"Dr Devjit Srivastava - sent her to pain geneticists at University College London (UCL) and Oxford University.
After tests, they found gene mutations which meant that she did not feel pain like most people."
Wouldn't that be objective evidence? Don't ask me I am not a geneticist...
Yes, this is a good point. In some very few cases, the normal objective tests we give to determine someone's feelings might not apply to an individual.
That is not at all what that example shows, they found objective evidence that she experience virtually no pain.
Quote:If she says she doesn't feel pain, when most people would, then we should be very careful in dealing with her. Maybe she's lying,Yeah, maybe send her to pain geneticists at University College London (UCL) and Oxford University to be tested? Oh wait, that's what the article say they did??? And they found a rare genetic disorder...all in my post and the link???
Oh look they didn't just believe her claim she wasn't experiencing pain:
"Jo, from Whitebridge, near Inverness, told the BBC Scotland news website that doctors didn't believe her when she said she wouldn't need pain relief after surgery."