Chapter

Suffering

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Abstract

We shall, I believe, be using the words to mark an important distinction within human experience if we differentiate between pain on the one hand and suffering, misery, or anguish (three terms that I shall use synonymously) on the other. Pain is, as we have seen in the previous chapter, a specific physical sensation.1 Suffering, however, is a mental state which may be as complex as human life itself. The endurance of pain is sometimes, but not always or even usually, an ingredient of suffering.

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Even love shows its glory as love only by its conquest over the doubts and estrangements, the absences and the misunderstandings, the griefs and the loneliness, that love glorifies with its light amidst all their tragedy.’ (The World and the Individual
  • Cf. Josiah Royce
  • J Royce
This is to be found in a number of writers
  • C C J Example
  • Webb
This is to be found in a number of writers; for example
  • C C J Webb
  • DB Webb