1. So do "you", as the thinker, voluntarily generate a thought? — raza
2. If so, how and why do you do this? — raza
2a. Do "you", as the thinker, generate an involuntary thought? — raza
4. If not, what DOES generate an involuntary thought within "you", the thinker? — raza
5. If "you" the thinker does NOT generate an involuntary thought, does it still not remain that an involuntary thought is still being regarded as a "thought"? — raza
6. If an "involuntary thought" is thereby a result of thinking then what or who is the thinker of it? — raza
7. Is the thinker of an "involuntary thought" you (the "thinker" of thoughts)? — raza
Personally I think that all thinking is involuntary - that they are induced within cause and effect. — raza
To reflect, plan, make decisions, etc. I do it mainly by concentrating or focusing on specific aims or goals, e.g. I want to modify my CV, so I will have to think about what aspects of my current CV need updating. — numberjohnny5
Nonconscious processes that are triggered by internal and/or external stimuli. Voluntarily thoughts can also trigger involuntary thoughts. — numberjohnny5
Cause and effect does not necessarily negate one's ability to choose what sorts of influence one wants — creativesoul
Personally I think that all thinking is involuntary - that they are induced within cause and effect. — raza
You cannot be a thing separate from your experience. You can only be whatever the experience is. Your identity is whatever is occurring. Whatever arises in consciousness is you. — raza
I think the idea of involuntary vs voluntary arises because some thoughts seem to be far more spontaneous - as if from nowhere, and not, therefore, necessarily following a remembered thread. — raza
Again, whatever arises in consciousness is me, but I am not limited to that. Your view here would seem to reflect that odd understanding that some people have, they 'they' are just their consciousness, and that their nonconscious minds, and their doings, are something foreign, something distinct from themselves. Maybe even their bodies are included too. :chin: Not so. You are all of you, not just some of the parts. Even your gut bacteria, which has its own DNA, not yours, contributes to 'you' and 'your' identity. You are a community. Some parts of that community are 'you' (in the sense that they carry your DNA) and some are not. And some parts of your mind are conscious, and some are not. All of them, in combination, are 'you'. — Pattern-chaser
Everything you have identified can be classified under “Experience”. — raza
My identity is not limited to "whatever is occurring", I don't think. I have memory and a remembered history. Sure enough, this history stems from past experiences, but it persists, and helps to form the being that I refer to as "me". — Pattern-chaser
On memory and history, memories arise within consciousness. — raza
You are fluid in that as an experience changes and shifts, so you also do... — raza
...because you are that. — raza
You cannot be a thing separate from your experience. You can only be whatever the experience is. — raza
And even this appearance only seems so because things happen outside of your consciousness, and you seem, perhaps, to be forgetting that this is so — Pattern-chaser
No. I am changed by my experiences. But I am not wholly defined by them, just as I am not wholly defined by consciousness. I have many parts. Memory and consciousness are two of them. My body is another vital part, as our minds are embodied, not independently existent. My nonconscious mind is another part. It does most of the work. It does much of what we like to think of as conscious processes, but are not. I think reducing us to mere experience is something of an insult. We have many failings and shortcomings, but we are more than just accumulated and remembered events. — Pattern-chaser
Consciousness and brain needs to be defined. “Brain”, which is process, is the room “you” are in. The universe perceived is essentially “the brain”. — raza
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