All life is suffering.
This is the grounding principle of Buddhism that still amazes me to this day as it was taught more than two thousand years ago by a man with no access to physics, mathematics, neuroscience or any of the other rational commodities we comfortably enjoy today. He hypothesised that suffering was a force that permeated all life and designed a careful path of mental training which aimed at overcoming this condition. Counterintuitively it did not involve the cessation of pain.
This question has puzzled me since an early age. Why does pain hurt? We know what pain is. It's a collection of signals sent from the so-called nocireceptors to the central nervous system and then to the brain. It can be triggered by a strong mechanical stimulation, by high heat or by the potassium release of bursted cells. It travels on known chemistries through known pathways across the nervous system, riding up along the spinal cord, up to the brain stem through the thalamus into the cortex where it blossoms like a beautiful question mark: why does it hurt? Why does pain hurt? Why does this dull, unrecognisably grey exchange in the nervous system hurt so damn much?
To find the answer we don't need to dive so deep to where it's pitch dark. We all know what suffering is. It's something we avoid. And pain is not the problem. You can pinch yourself and though you feel a subtle pain you can go on. The real problem is suffering, of which pain is a common cause. Suffering is what keeps your hand away from the fire.
If we are to view ourselves as mechanical beings then suffering is what will prevent us in the future from doing something. It's a simple observation: if I hit my nose with a hammer and I feel pain and pain makes me suffer, I won't do it again. After the experience, like the nose, the system just isn't the same. It has become dynamically impossible for the system to spontaneously pick up a hammer and hit itself. If you don't believe my word, try it yourself, I trust my odds.
The motion of a system towards a new dynamical state is called learning. The formation of and motion away from a repulsive state is called suffering. The formation of and motion towards an attractive state is called pleasure.
Of course, impossible is such a strong word and an inaccurate one for that matter. The system could very well find a way around it after sometime. The system could also perpetuate its suffering by suppressing the wrong reaction to a painful stimulus thereby hopping on a spiral of hurt. Which is worsened if additionally a smart part of the system reacts positively to it and a dumb part of the system reacts negatively, which results in an obsessive behaviour, with one end of the mind being drawn to an action which causes the suffering of another. The system could also overreact, blocking far more than is required, which is called a trauma. This also explains why you can learn to not suffer from pain, by familiarising yourself with the feeling and ceasing to react negatively to it. And even pleasure, instead of suffering, can arise out pain, if pain's dynamical role is to encourage the system to react more often in a destructive way, which is termed masochism.
These definitions of suffering and pleasure are applicable to any system. In fact, they are familiar experiences to any adaptive system. In the next post we'll deal with a very simple and completely unrealistic one: Marjorie.