Hasty Briefsbeta

What if our ancestors didn't feel pain the way we do

5 days ago
  • #interdisciplinary-research
  • #human-experience
  • #history-of-emotions
  • Rob Boddice, a historian, explores how emotions and senses were experienced differently in the past compared to today.
  • The field of the history of emotions and senses has grown, focusing on ineffable qualities like smells and grief in historical contexts.
  • Boddice challenges the idea of six universal emotions (happiness, sadness, fear, anger, surprise, disgust), arguing that emotional experiences are culturally and historically variable.
  • He emphasizes 'experiential relativity,' suggesting that human nature is not constant but varies across time and cultures.
  • Boddice's approach involves interdisciplinary research, combining art history, theology, archaeology, and more to reconstruct past experiences.
  • Pain, a key interest for Boddice, is examined in his book 'Knowing Pain,' highlighting how cultural contexts shape its perception.
  • Historical examples, like medieval carpenters or Hildegard of Bingen's visions, show how past experiences differ from modern interpretations.
  • Boddice critiques empathy as a tool for understanding the past, advocating instead for a focus on historical specificity.
  • The HEX institute, which Boddice helped found, promotes research into the diversity of human experiences across history.
  • Other scholars, like Joanna Bourke and Javier Moscoso, offer contrasting views, with Bourke focusing on violence and Moscoso on continuities in human experiences.
  • Boddice's work raises philosophical questions about what it means to be human and how we understand others' experiences.