Perhaps you should read a book by someone who has studied the effects of
aversive stimuli for half a century:
Coercion and its Fallout. Murray Sidman.
"Peter F" <19eimc_minus19 at ozemail.com.au> wrote in message
news:440ef5fb$0$14520$5a62ac22 at per-qv1-newsreader-01.iinet.net.au...
> You Konstantin have provide me with some of the rare breaths of fresh air
> here in bionet.neuroscience.
>> Thanks for visiting!
>> Here is my 'concEPTually' compressed position of (a perversely septic
> humored ;->) understanding (explained in brief):
>> Given that one looks from far enough above, from different angles, zooms
> in and out as required, and is both perceptive and realistic enough to not
> demand a *too complete* understanding (or a too finely dotted or densely
> scientifically plotted picture) of how lifetime environmental features and
> influences affect and interact with the biochemistry of individuals [to
> cause the differences between ill and a well (neuropsychophysiologically
> and 'physically' so) human individuals/relationships/societies], then a
> comprehensive enough 'explanatory picture' that both satisfies and can be
> a guide for further scientific exploration [for further new details and
> insights into this (and other) aspect of "What Is going on"] is already
> possible to achieve.
>> I know (but will here not try to explain how) that, for a balanced
> picture of us people, the most lacking (or too faint and difuse) focus of
> mainstream scientific attention is the one that looks into how different
> kinds of trauma [*slow* as well as tardy traumas - i.e. a spectrum of
> lifetime situations the survival of which require ("implore") that a
> synaptic (hence possibly highly specific) "hibernation" is induced within
> the nervous system (or within what I only half-jokingly refer to as the
> "Actention Selection System") of individuals who are "in" such situations]
> are stored and how they thereafter insidiously influence the psychological
> and somatic development, physiology and behavior of individuals.
>> Janov calls such memories "primal pain".
>> I have had fun by contriving, or playing with words to arrive at, the
> acronym CURSES for the same type of memories.
>> [Actually, I have made sure I can describe such memories and how they
> become as insidious as they are, by saying that: What puts a
> "'Conditioned-in' Unconsciously Remembered Stressors, Effecting Symtoms"
> the "Actention Selection System" of individuals are happenstances that
> causes them to end up in a "Specific Hibernation Imploring Type
> Situations".]
>> With best wishes and regards,
>> Peter
>>