I now pose the question. Does different levels of intelligence mean different levels of consciousness and self-awareness? — Maximum7
I don't think disabled people have any less consciousness than brilliant people. — RogueAI
I now pose the question. Does different levels of intelligence mean different levels of consciousness and self-awareness? — Maximum7
I like this argument. Although in my case, at least, the two are linked. When I am drunk and/or high, not only is my degree of consciousness higher, my intelligence generally is too.When the times when I'm wasted, my consciousness should be "less" — RogueAI
I now pose the question. Does different levels of intelligence mean different levels of consciousness and self-awareness? — Maximum7
I don't think it needs to be less. It may simply be different. Otherwise, what it is that makes them "disabled"? — Apollodorus
Capacity for 'self awareness 'is another ambiguous term. I would probably call that insight. — Tom Storm
You're either conscious or you're not. — RogueAI
But if someone can be "highly conscious", "barely conscious", and "unconscious", then this suggests different degrees of consciousness. At any rate, there must be increasing degrees of consciousness between unconsciousness and full consciousness, e.g. when we wake up from deep sleep.
Conversely, when we are extremely tired we may be increasingly less conscious than when fully awake and alert. The same is true when the normal function of our brain or general nervous system is impaired due to illness or other causes. — Apollodorus
"Insight" seems to suggest awareness of something that is hidden, not necessarily the self. — Apollodorus
the conscious experience in those cases (drowsiness vs wide-awake) is just different, and not a measure of quantity of consciousness. — RogueAI
I can't think of something that is more successfully hidden in many people than the self. Hence the aphorism, νῶθι σεαυτόν. A classic Delphic maxim - know thyself... And yes, I appreciate that there are several conative applications of this idea. — Tom Storm
Does different levels of intelligence mean different levels of consciousness and self-awareness? — Maximum7
Intelligence and consciousness are two totally different things.
The only thing that I can say with some certainty is that they seem to be proportional. — Alkis Piskas
The only thing that I can say with some certainty is that they seem to be proportional.
— Alkis Piskas
That would suggest they are related and therefore not totally different. — Kenosha Kid
he finally realizes that his co-workers had been constantly making fun of him and all his memories come to the forefront and it’s almost like he is “waking up” and reliving his life — Maximum7
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