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Consciousness
Consciousness is sometimes viewed as a particular parametric factor in the analogy of blood pressure or electric charge. The paper argues that this is an erroneous conception becomes consciousness involves a varied assortment of different phenomena that have no single unified commonality. And so even as âabnormal psychologyâ has to be a disjointed assembly of diverse specialties so will âconsciousness studiesâ have to be
Notes: Original Notes from the First Women\u27s Liberation Consciousness Raising Group in Jacksonville
Handwritten and typed notes including topics of discussion for the Consciousness Raising group discussion meetings October 22, 1970-March 1972. NOW Major local projects: Consciousness raising groups
The Argument from Consciousness and Divine Consciousness
The paper aims for an improvement of the so-called argument from consciousness while focusing on the first-person-perspective as a unique feature of consciousness that opens the floor for a theistic explanation. As a side effect of knowledge arguments, which are necessary to keep a posterior materialism off bounds, the paper proposes an interpretation of divine knowledge as knowledge of things rather than knowledge of facts
Artificial consciousness and the consciousness-attention dissociation
Artificial Intelligence is at a turning point, with a substantial increase in projects aiming to implement sophisticated forms of human intelligence in machines. This research attempts to model specific forms of intelligence through brute-force search heuristics and also reproduce features of human perception and cognition, including emotions. Such goals have implications for artificial consciousness, with some arguing that it will be achievable once we overcome short-term engineering challenges. We believe, however, that phenomenal consciousness cannot be implemented in machines. This becomes clear when considering emotions and examining the dissociation between consciousness and attention in humans. While we may be able to program ethical behavior based on rules and machine learning, we will never be able to reproduce emotions or empathy by programming such control systemsâthese will be merely simulations. Arguments in favor of this claim include considerations about evolution, the neuropsychological aspects of emotions, and the dissociation between attention and consciousness found in humans. Ultimately, we are far from achieving artificial consciousness
Why "consciousness" means what it does.
âConsciousnessâ seems to be a polysemic, ambiguous, term. Because of this, theorists have sought to distinguish the different kinds of phenomena that âconsciousnessâ denotes, leading to a proliferation of terms for different kinds of consciousness. However, some philosophersâunivocalists about consciousnessâargue that âconsciousnessâ is not polysemic or ambiguous. By drawing upon the history of philosophy and psychology, and some resources from semantic theory, univocalism about consciousness is shown to be implausible. This finding is important, for if we accept the univocalist account then we are less likely to subject our thought and talk about the mind to the kind of critical analysis that it needs. The exploration of the semantics of âconsciousnessâ offered here, by way of contrast, clarifies and fine-tunes our thought and talk about consciousness and conscious mentality and explains why âconsciousnessâ means what it does, and why it means a number of different, but related, things
Heightened Consciousness
Heightened consciousness has become a common expression in daily conversations, but it expresses a number of different concepts depending on the meaning of the speaker and is related to other phrases or terms that have slightly different connotations. This entry explores the different meanings of the term heightened consciousness and similar phrases in regard to personal development
Founding quantum theory on the basis of consciousness
In the present work, quantum theory is founded on the framework of
consciousness, in contrast to earlier suggestions that consciousness might be
understood starting from quantum theory. The notion of streams of
consciousness, usually restricted to conscious beings, is extended to the
notion of a Universal/Global stream of conscious flow of ordered events. The
streams of conscious events which we experience constitute sub-streams of the
Universal stream. Our postulated ontological character of consciousness also
consists of an operator which acts on a state of potential consciousness to
create or modify the likelihoods for later events to occur and become part of
the Universal conscious flow. A generalized process of measurement-perception
is introduced, where the operation of consciousness brings into existence, from
a state of potentiality, the event in consciousness. This is mathematically
represented by (a) an operator acting on the state of potential-consciousness
before an actual event arises in consciousness and (b) the reflecting of the
result of this operation back onto the state of potential-consciousness for
comparison in order for the event to arise in consciousness. Beginning from our
postulated ontology that consciousness is primary and from the most elementary
conscious contents, such as perception of periodic change and motion, quantum
theory follows naturally as the description of the conscious experience.Comment: 41 pages, 3 figures. To be published in Foundations of Physics, Vol
36 (6) (June 2006), published online at
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10701-006-9049-
Animal Consciousness
This chapter addresses the extent to which nonhuman animals are conscious. Most important perhaps is what criteria should be used in making such a determination
Consciousness, Origins
To explain the origin of anything, we must be clear about that which we are explaining. There seem to be two main meanings for the term consciousness. One might be called open in that it equates consciousness with awareness and experience and considers rudimentary sensations to have evolved at a specific point in the evolution of increasing complexity. But certainly the foundation for such sensation is a physical body. It is unclear, however, exactly what the physical requirements are for a âcentral experiencerâ to emerge in the course of evolution. Some suggest that it would require a basic brain, others a central nervous system, and others stipulate only a cellular membrane. The open definition is most often assumed by the so-called hard sciences.
The closed meaning of consciousness differentiates between a special sort of experience, i.e., conscious experience, and a special sort of awareness (i.e., self-awareness). This is the approach of psychoanalysis and psychology that accepts the existence of an unconscious mind. It is also the view of most phenomenological philosophers and psychologists (Martin Heidegger, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Jacques Lacan, etc.). This entry discusses several scientific and philosophical views of consciousness and its origins
Consciousness complexity
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