Pain Within Altered States of Consciousness
January 1, 2026 DOI: 10.52305/ykwx2628
Abstract
Pain Within Altered States of Consciousness challenges conventional assumptions about pain. Rather than treating pain as a simple product of tissue damage, this book presents it as a dynamic construction of conscious experience—shaped by brain networks, attention, emotion, expectation, and the organization of the self. Bringing together anesthesiology, neuroscience, pain medicine, contemplative science, and philosophy of mind, the volume explores how pain transforms across altered states of consciousness, including anesthesia, hypnosis, meditation, psychedelic-assisted therapy, dissociation, and disorders of consciousness. It demonstrates how identical nociceptive input can lead to profoundly different experiences depending on global brain integration and predictive processing. Drawing on neuroimaging research, clinical evidence, and contemporary models of large-scale brain dynamics, the book offers a unified framework for understanding pain modulation across states of awareness. It also addresses ethically urgent questions, including covert suffering, pain in non-communicative patients, and the moral responsibility of clinicians working under uncertainty. This interdisciplinary work provides both a practical conceptual framework for clinicians and a theoretical foundation for scholars seeking to understand suffering at the intersection of brain, consciousness, and embodiment.