Human Consciousness Essay

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    The human computer The thoughts , perceptions, memories and emotions that make up human consciousness. Cognition in widest definition encompasses all forms and understanding through thought, experience, and the senses. Reductionism attempts to explain the processes of living organism using physical laws usually applied to nonliving objects. David Hume argued that the knowledge of cause and relationship based on the accumulation of subjective experiences, thus science explain events in terms of

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    think and wonder about its own ability to wonder. With the arrival of humans, it has been said, the universe has suddenly become conscious of itself. This, truly, it the greatest mystery of all.” –VS Ramachandran After the first unit and research paper, the classmates of PSYV 358 learned all about what consciousness is: how it is defined, different theories of why it exists, its benefits. I specifically learned that consciousness could ultimately be defined as the state or quality of awareness. It

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    Consciousness in Animals The conscious mind is a complex thing that has many questions that science is yet to answer. The conscious is composed by awareness and responsiveness in one’s mind, it is expressed by one’s emotions, thoughts, and actions. Consciousness to me is defined by the ability to be aware and responsive. Awareness is an element that distinguishes the conscious from the unconscious. To be aware is to be knowledgeable of your surroundings and to know what is happening in the world

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    argument that to be aware of the world is that it exists. Penrose’s perception of consciousness it isn’t ordinary electrochemical processes activity in the brain but it is a feature of the brain’s activity and that it is not localised. Honderich expressed that he thinks consciousness is related to the brain and the microtubules as being conscious is linked there being activity in the brain. He went on to say that consciousness consists of an existence of a world which has particular dependence on the perceiver

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    characteristic of our era, is in fact integral to the very existence, survival, and indeed consciousness of not humankind, but the whole of socio-sentient life. Johnstone, too, argues his point against the devaluation of rhetoric as a discipline, even though his claim runs counter to that of Kennedy: rhetoric, he says, “is the evocation and maintenance of the consciousness required for communication,” a property unique to human beings (21). It would be folly, according to Johnstone, to attribute this

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    The Absolute Ego

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    remarks and thoughts upon the subject matter. Fichte was an idealist. This is the belief that nothing is known to us except ideas. Since this was the belief of Fichte he avoided dualism and instead believed that only that which is in and for consciousness can be assumed to exist. Fichte thus proceeded to explain experience as the product of intelligence in itself. This idea of intelligence in itself is the ego. To understand this further we must “think the wall”, once you think the wall then

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    The consciousness argument is the strongest objection against the Turing’s test. Machines act by interpreting symbols based on given rules. If they follow rules and interprets symbols, then the programmers influence their actions, not their own thoughts and feelings. Since their own thoughts and feelings do not influence their actions, they are not truly aware of how these actions can affect their emotions and the surroundings. If machines are not aware of their behaviors, they are not conscious

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    An Integral Theory of Consciousness and RR Ken Wilber (1997) reviewed various dimensions of the theories of consciousness in existing literature and proposes an integral theory that will incorporate most of the prominent existing theories. The theory Wilber proposes is an ‘Integral Theory of Consciousness’. Specifically, he reviews the cognitive science outlooks: introspectionism; neuropsychology; individual psychotherapy; social psychology; clinical psychiatry; developmental psychology; problematic

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    Nitrous Oxide

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    After James began to consider the possible different explanations for the ambiguities that exist in human consciousness, he began to experiment with drugs, specifically nitrous oxide. Nitrous oxide is a chemical that is more commonly known at laughing gas that is used most commonly in dental offices and it is a substance that alters the conscious state of a person. In an article published in 1996 in the Atlantic, Dmitri Tymoczko explores the often unknown influence of Nitrous Oxide on the thought

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    for what personal identity is Locke states, “depends on consciousness, not on substance” or a soul (John Locke: An Essay Concerning Human Understanding). Locke seems to define memories as the source of a consciousness in his chapter of Identity and Diversity. In addition, Locke believes that consciousness is independent from all substances, but cannot exist independently without a body or a mind. However, that doesn’t mean that consciousness is confined to a particular body or mind. For example

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