Maybe it is time for the philosophers and humanity to wake up to greater self knowledge and consciousness. — Jack Cummins
... we’re all mostly automated, unconscious beings. There’s no way around it. From our breathing and heart beating to our internal workings of our organs, there’s far more unconscious activity going on than conscious— leaving aside more complex behavior, which is itself largely unconscious (though it does vary). — Xtrix
:100: :up:There’s nothing to be convinced of— it’s a simple fact. — Xtrix
... we’re all mostly automated, unconscious beings. There’s no way around it. From our breathing and heart beating to our internal workings of our organs, there’s far more unconscious activity going on than conscious — Xtrix
I often wonder about the idea of 'self' and how it stands in relation to philosophy. Today, I was reading David Hume's suggestion that, There are some philosophers who imagine we are every moment intimately conscious of what we call our self. The idea of self is central to ideas of authenticity of identity, but what is self exactly?The idea may be seen as underlying questions arising in body and mind, as well as in connection with the question of self and others. But, what is 'self' exactly? Does it exist in it's own right, or as a construct? Even if we only see it as a construct, most of us do feel a sense of self, and how do we make sense of this at all in a way which is useful and meaningful for us in life? — Jack Cummins
Unconscious doesn’t have to mean automatic and split off from consciousness. — Joshs
Enactive, embodied approaches to cognition reveal the body as integrated with mind in a complex and inseparable fashion. — Joshs
Rather, the unconscious is a kind of implicit consciousness. — Joshs
Now we're just defining our way into believing that everything is conscious. But that's just not the reality. There are all kinds of things I do that I have no memory of, am not aware of, etc. -- from complex behavior like driving to the inner workings of my body. If we want to claim this is "implicit consciousness," then we're off to a computer model of the mind, where rules are "stored" somewhere in consciousness. That's not convincing to me. — Xtrix
Yes - but only included as a rather obvious throw-away line. It is no great surprise !Amity also speaks of the multidimensional aspects of the self. — Jack Cummins
How does self-concept affect how we interact on forums such as this?
We bring ourselves, thoughts and ideas. We are multi-dimensional beings. Not all of which is on display here. — Amity
To be aware of the games we play with ourselves and to become cognisant of the constructed persona we have become. I don't have the answers to this and I am not recommending an obsessive and paralysing intellectual examination of everything we do and think - that would bring its own problems. However, being aware of one's self-talk and asking some simple questions about our assumptions can work wonders. — Tom Storm
I think what is interesting in these is the cultural aspects of thinking about the self because I am sure that the whole way we think about the self is in a social context. — Jack Cummins
I think that my own sense of self is affected by interaction on this forum in particular. When I feel that I am doing badly here I feel that my own self esteem is affected detrimentally, just as if it was happening at work. Similarly, when I feel that I have meaningful interactions on the site, I do feel validated as a human being, and I think that this definitely gave me a sense of self worth during the isolation of lockdowns. — Jack Cummins
With regard to how I wrote about the idea of fearing doing 'badly' on the site, I will admit that this connects to my own fears of failure and rejection. — Jack Cummins
What does it mean to 'do badly here' — Amity
Personally, I think that it does affect me possibly more than it should, and that is probably because I spend a lot of time in my room by myself using it. It almost feels like reality television because it goes on night and day, with new threads popping up and heated, dramatic exchanges of ideas. — Jack Cummins
Yes. We can hold an impression of a poster after a single interaction. Just as when we meet someone in real life. How unfortunate when there can be so much more to a person and their thoughts.I think that there is a danger of conflating the other's position and the other person almost into a caricature. — Jack Cummins
...philosophy has traditionally often been in the form of books, but that does usually mean more direct human contact with others in the process of the creation of books, although that may be less now when people can self publish online. People can promote their own ideas without them being validated through being accepted for publication — Jack Cummins
But, I think that I have probably created a lot of threads in a short time, and it is actually a lot of work trying to write so many replies. So, I probably do need a bit of a break, — Jack Cummins
Yeah, wow. Interesting. This got me curious about my own "production" —Just for a larf - I did a wee comparison.
Amity - 3yrs. 1692 posts. 12 threads.
Jack - 10 months. 3242 posts. I lost count but I think c. 63 threads.
Wow. — Amity
I think the pandemic quarantine + :fire: 2020 politics, etc account for 2/3rds of my posts, but I've no idea why I've not started any new threads.6 years
12 posts, 0 threads
in the last c2 years (logged off for +4 years)
4,592 posts, 0 threads
current totals
4,604 posts, 0 threads — 180 Proof on TPF
We have seen individualism but I think that we are now in a time in which the individual is viwed as being so insignificant. — Jack Cummins
One aspect which I wonder about this, is to what extent are people creating identities on social media because the scope for expressing in daily life is so restrictive. — Jack Cummins
Unconscious doesn’t have to mean automatic and split off from consciousness. Enactive, embodied approaches to cognition reveal the body as integrated with mind in a complex and inseparable fashion. Each subsystem of the body is reciprocally interconnected with all the others , so that the person operates as a functional unity. What this means for the idea of the unconscious ia that what is outside of awareness is not necessarily cut off from it. Rather, the unconscious is a kind of implicit consciousness. One can think of this in terms of levels of awareness rather than functionally independent chambers as Freud’s psychodynamic theory had it.
The reason that subliminal
advertising was such a dismal failure is that what is not important enough for me to be consciously aware of it cannot influence me at an unconscious level
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