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Consciousness - Functions of consciousness | A Wisdom Archive on Consciousness - Functions of consciousness |  | Consciousness - Functions of consciousness A selection of articles related to Consciousness - Functions of consciousness |  |
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Consciousness, Consciousness - Access consciousness, Consciousness - Cognitive Neuroscience, Consciousness - Cognitive neuroscience approaches, Consciousness - Consciousness and language, Consciousness - Etymology, Consciousness - Functions of consciousness, Consciousness - Mirror test, Consciousness - Miscellaneous, Consciousness - People, Consciousness - Philosophical approaches, Consciousness - Philosophy, Consciousness - Physical Theories of Consciousness, Consciousness - Physical approaches, Consciousness - Spiritual approaches, Consciousness - Tests of consciousness, Consciousness - The description and location of phenomenal consciousness, Consciousness - Turing Test, Attention, Binocular rivalry, Blindsight, Change blindness, Cognitive science, Iconic memory, Multistable perception, Neural correlate of consciousness, Neural Darwinism, Short term memory, Society of Mind, Unconscious mind, Visual short term memory
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Consciousness - Functions of consciousness |  |  |  | Consciousness - Functions of consciousness: Encyclopedia II - Consciousness - Philosophical approachesSome philosophers suggest that consciousness resists or even defies definition. Others believe it can be usefully distinguished between phenomenal consciousness and access or psychological consciousness, while still others disagree. There are many philosophical stances on consciousness, including: behaviorism, dualism, idealism, functionalism, phenomenalism, physicalism, emergentism, and mysticism.
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See also:Consciousness, Consciousness - Etymology, Consciousness - Consciousness and language, Consciousness - Cognitive neuroscience approaches, Consciousness - Philosophical approaches, Consciousness - Phenomenal and access consciousness, Consciousness - The description and location of phenomenal consciousness, Consciousness - Access consciousness, Consciousness - Physical approaches, Consciousness - Spiritual approaches, Consciousness - Functions of consciousness, Consciousness - Tests of consciousness, Consciousness - Turing Test, Consciousness - Mirror test, Consciousness - Cognitive Neuroscience, Consciousness - Philosophy, Consciousness - Physical Theories of Consciousness, Consciousness - People, Consciousness - Miscellaneous Read more here: » Consciousness: Encyclopedia II - Consciousness - Philosophical approaches |
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 |  |  | Consciousness - Functions of consciousness: Encyclopedia II - Consciousness - Philosophical approaches
Some philosophers suggest that consciousness resists or even defies definition. Others believe it can be usefully distinguished between phenomenal consciousness and access or psychological consciousness, while still others disagree. There are many philosophical stances on consciousness, including: behaviorism, dualism, idealism, functionalism, phenomenalism, physicalism, emergentism, and mysticism. John Locke's chapter XXVII "On Identity and Diversity" in An Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1689) has been sai ...
See also:Consciousness, Consciousness - Etymology, Consciousness - Consciousness and language, Consciousness - Cognitive neuroscience approaches, Consciousness - Philosophical approaches, Consciousness - Phenomenal and access consciousness, Consciousness - The description and location of phenomenal consciousness, Consciousness - Access consciousness, Consciousness - Physical approaches, Consciousness - Spiritual approaches, Consciousness - Functions of consciousness, Consciousness - Tests of consciousness, Consciousness - Turing Test, Consciousness - Mirror test, Consciousness - Cognitive Neuroscience, Consciousness - Philosophy, Consciousness - Physical Theories of Consciousness, Consciousness - People, Consciousness - Miscellaneous Read more here: » Consciousness: Encyclopedia II - Consciousness - Philosophical approaches |
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 |  |  | Consciousness - Functions of consciousness: Encyclopedia II - Consciousness - Physical approachesEven at the dawn of Newtonian science, Leibniz and many others were suggesting physical theories of consciousness. Modern physical theories of consciousness can be divided into three types: theories to explain behaviour and access consciousness, theories to explain phenomenal consciousness and theories to explain the quantum mechanical (QM) Quantum mind. Theories that seek to explain behaviour are an everyday part of neuroscience, some of these theories of access consciousness, such as Edelman's theory, contentiously identify phenomenal cons ...
See also:Consciousness, Consciousness - Etymology, Consciousness - Consciousness and language, Consciousness - Cognitive neuroscience approaches, Consciousness - Philosophical approaches, Consciousness - Phenomenal and access consciousness, Consciousness - The description and location of phenomenal consciousness, Consciousness - Access consciousness, Consciousness - Physical approaches, Consciousness - Spiritual approaches, Consciousness - Functions of consciousness, Consciousness - Tests of consciousness, Consciousness - Turing Test, Consciousness - Mirror test, Consciousness - Cognitive Neuroscience, Consciousness - Philosophy, Consciousness - Physical Theories of Consciousness, Consciousness - People, Consciousness - Miscellaneous Read more here: » Consciousness: Encyclopedia II - Consciousness - Physical approaches |
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 |  |  | Consciousness - Functions of consciousness: Encyclopedia - ConsciousnessConsciousness is a quality of the mind generally regarded to comprise such key features as subjectivity, self-awareness, sentience, sapience, and the ability to perceive the relationship between oneself and one's environment. It is a subject of much research in philosophy of mind, psychology, neurology, and cognitive science.
Some philosophers divide consciousness into phenomenal consciousness, which is experience itself, and access consciousness, which is the processing of the things in experience (Block 2004). Others consider ...
Including:
Read more here: » Consciousness: Encyclopedia - Consciousness |
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 |  |  | Consciousness - Functions of consciousness: Astral Journey and the Astral BodyAstral Journey and the Astral Body You first separate yourself from the body; then you identify yourself with the mind, and then you function on the mental plane, with this fine body just as you do on this physical plane. Through concentration, you rise above the body-consciousness; through meditation, you rise above mind; and finally through Samadhi, you realize your spiritual nature. These are three important exercises of Antaranga Sadhana in the achievements of Kaivalya, the final beautitude. Read more here: » Astral
Journey: Astral Journey and the Astral Body |
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 |  |  | Consciousness - Functions of consciousness: Encyclopedia II - Philosophy of mind - FunctionalismAs alluded to above, many philosophers accept the thrust of the multiple realizability argument and thus reject both physicalism and reductionism wholesale. The argument has motivated another view known as functionalism which holds that mental states aren't physical, rather, they're functional. A functional state describes a relationship between certain inputs (sensory stimuli), outputs (behavior), and other mental states. A pain is functional in virtue of having a certain causal role. That causal role is determined by certain input stimuli ...
See also:Philosophy of mind, Philosophy of mind - What is the mind?, Philosophy of mind - Mental events, Philosophy of mind - Mental properties, Philosophy of mind - Reductionism, Philosophy of mind - Functionalism, Philosophy of mind - What is involved in each type of cognitive process?, Philosophy of mind - What is consciousness?, Philosophy of mind - Frame issues, Philosophy of mind - Philosophers of mind Read more here: » Philosophy of mind: Encyclopedia II - Philosophy of mind - Functionalism |
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 |  |  | Consciousness - Functions of consciousness: Encyclopedia II - Philosophy of mind - What is the mind?Does the word mind refer simply to a collection of particular thoughts, feelings, and so forth, or does it refer to some entity over and above those particular thoughts, feelings, and so forth? If mind refers to an entity, is it composed of the same kind of substance as physical objects, or of some other substance? This article does not propose to answer these questions, but t ...
See also:Philosophy of mind, Philosophy of mind - What is the mind?, Philosophy of mind - Mental events, Philosophy of mind - Mental properties, Philosophy of mind - Reductionism, Philosophy of mind - Functionalism, Philosophy of mind - What is involved in each type of cognitive process?, Philosophy of mind - What is consciousness?, Philosophy of mind - Frame issues, Philosophy of mind - Philosophers of mind Read more here: » Philosophy of mind: Encyclopedia II - Philosophy of mind - What is the mind? |
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 |  |  | Consciousness - Functions of consciousness: Encyclopedia II - Philosophy of mind - Frame issuesA final class of questions emerging from this aspect of philosophy concern the validity of the commonsense categories employed. Must it be the case that determinism rules out free will, or is it that one or both of these categories has been poorly defined? Does the rule against multiplication of entities force materialists to exclude higher-order entities such as semantic systems, or have we endowed 'material' with unwarranted properties? Is the term 'natural' meaningful if we deny that it ...
See also:Philosophy of mind, Philosophy of mind - What is the mind?, Philosophy of mind - Mental events, Philosophy of mind - Mental properties, Philosophy of mind - Reductionism, Philosophy of mind - Functionalism, Philosophy of mind - What is involved in each type of cognitive process?, Philosophy of mind - What is consciousness?, Philosophy of mind - Frame issues, Philosophy of mind - Philosophers of mind Read more here: » Philosophy of mind: Encyclopedia II - Philosophy of mind - Frame issues |
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 |  |  | Consciousness - Functions of consciousness: Encyclopedia II - Philosophy of mind - What is involved in each type of cognitive process?We can also ask questions about the different specific cognitive processes, and of course we might ask what cognitive processes in general are supposed to be. In that case, we'd be asking what distinguishes a cognitive process from any other kind of process. That is another way of putting the mind-body problem. We can also ask a series of more specialized questions, about each individual cognitive process. We can get the answers through cognitive science.
Take perception as an example. Philosophers ask what ...
See also:Philosophy of mind, Philosophy of mind - What is the mind?, Philosophy of mind - Mental events, Philosophy of mind - Mental properties, Philosophy of mind - Reductionism, Philosophy of mind - Functionalism, Philosophy of mind - What is involved in each type of cognitive process?, Philosophy of mind - What is consciousness?, Philosophy of mind - Frame issues, Philosophy of mind - Philosophers of mind Read more here: » Philosophy of mind: Encyclopedia II - Philosophy of mind - What is involved in each type of cognitive process? |
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