Does consciousness = Awareness ? — Basko
When someone sleep, we say he/she is not conscious — Basko
Consciousness is a direct result of ones awareness of ones self, while awareness could not truly exist without ones consciousness. — Enki B
Consciousness seems to be ones awareness of existence — Enki B
Being asleep is another form of consciousness — Enki B
I can be conscious of something, having some qualitative experience and at the same time not being aware of my conscious experience, therefore i don't realize, know or show persception of my conscious activities ..
I am not aware but i experience - this being said, the "I" lose it's meaning.
It's like experiencing something without realization of experiencing and without realization of oneself identity. — Basko
Now imagine someone with a severe case of ADHD - i am not that familiar with ADHD, i use it bcs it's a well known focus disorder -, as his parents begun to realize the case of their son, they sent him to a very special school for him to learn about human knowledge despite his difficulties. The kid has grown up and now he is 20yo, he learned in school his situation and so many stuff that you can easily say he is fully aware of his identity and his experience. He is a smart guy and can think deeply but only if the subject is exciting enough so he can pay full attention on the subject. Despite his great knowledge - which offer him a great awareness - he struggle with attention and most of the time he can't control his focus. — Basko
Does consciousness = Awareness ?
- Does consciousness = Attention ? — Basko
- Does consciousness = Both ? or Something else ? — Basko
I'm not so sure about this definition. What entails "oneself"? What is something that one can be aware of within oneself? What is the difference of being aware of something within oneself and being aware of something outside of oneself? In other words, what is the boundary of oneself?Consciousness : Quality or state of being aware especially of something within oneself — Basko
If "I" loses its meaning then what does the experiencing? I think what you are talking about is the difference between being self-aware, or self-conscious, and being aware of everything else. You turn your awareness back on itself and in doing so, you become self-aware.I can be conscious of something, having some qualitative experience and at the same time not being aware of my conscious experience, therefore i don't realize, know or show persception of my conscious activities ..
I am not aware but i experience - this being said, the "I" lose it's meaning.
It's like experiencing something without realization of experiencing and without realization of oneself identity. — Basko
The brain is a machine. If you can't explain the relationship between your brain and your subjective experiences, then how can you declare so confidently that machines don't have subjective experiences? What is a subjective experience - a soul? It seems a bit religious to keep declaring things like this - as if human's and their brains are special machines that have this extra quality about them that other machines don't have.No, because both of those can be defined functionally and performed by a machine. It leaves out the subjective experiences. — Marchesk
How does all of this not entail attention and awareness? How can one be aware and attending particular things without subjectivity?Subjectivity, qualia, what it's like, color, pain, imagination, etc. — Marchesk
I can be conscious of something, having some qualitative experience and at the same time not being aware of my conscious experience, therefore i don't realize, know or show persception of my conscious activities .. — Basko
My questions are simple :
- Does consciousness = Awareness ?
- Does consciousness = Attention ?
- Does consciousness = Both ? or Something else ? — Basko
Then attention is a type of awareness? — Harry Hindu
if the brain is not a type of machine than what is it? What does it do? What is it for? — Harry Hindu
What if silicon-based life evolved by natural selection on another planet? — Harry Hindu
Would you consider that silicon-based life as conscious? — Harry Hindu
What would be the difference between the silicon-based life and a robot with a computer brain and cameras, microphones and tactile pressure points for senses? — Harry Hindu
It’s common to restrict the definition of consciousness only to those who are self-conscious, but if this is really what consciousness is, then I wonder: why have the distinct term ‘self-consciousness’ In the first place? — Possibility
I’m not sure what you’re trying to describe here. I imagine it’s like being affected by an experience, without being aware of what it was within the experience that affected you...? — Possibility
If "I" loses its meaning then what does the experiencing? I think what you are talking about is the difference between being self-aware, or self-conscious, and being aware of everything else. You turn your awareness back on itself and in doing so, you become self-aware. — Harry Hindu
You'd have to try to give an example of how you think that's possible. — Terrapin Station
If "I" loses its meaning then what does the experiencing? — Harry Hindu
- Does unconscious processing = unconscious awareness ? (e.g. in a thermostat)
- Does unconscious processing = unconscious attention ? (e.g. in a CCTV camera) — bongo fury
Ultimately, this is really just a question of how you choose to define it. — Pantagruel
I favour a very liberal definition of consciousness. — Pantagruel
I was trying to differentiate conscious activities - experience/qualia - and awareness of that activities. Awareness was defined above as "Having or showing realization, perception, or knowledge" so i was thinking that someone could have qualitative experiences and at the same time not realizing what is happening ,not knowing what is all about and not having perception .. not being aware.
* Perception = organization, identification, and interpretation of sensory information in order to represent and understand the presented information, or the environment. - Wiki.
Imagine we understand what consciousness really is and how it works, then we proceed to create a artificial life form with our understanding. As we build we realize we don't have enough money to build it like we wanted so we chose to decrease dramatically the cognitive abilities, the memory storage and the capacity of our AI to form a new structures.
Once we finished, we decide to study it, by various tests, to see how our AI work. As we test our AI we remark that it can't realize what is happening due to very low cognitive abilities, it cannot form enough knowledge too bcs of very low memory storage, and bcs of low capacity of forming new structures it perceive - organization of sensory inputs - very little about the world. Our AI experience - the rough sensory inputs - without realization of experiencing and without realization of oneself identity, our AI is not aware - at least by the definition above.
Ofcs is an imagined scenario, maybe what we call consciousness need some good level of cognitive abilities, memory, perception and maybe more .. — Basko
How would AI have a qualitative experience of something if it's not conscious? — Terrapin Station
AI have qualitative experience but it's not aware. — Basko
- Does unconscious processing = unconscious awareness ? (e.g. in a thermostat)
- Does unconscious processing = unconscious attention ? (e.g. in a CCTV camera)
— bongo fury
What your definition of Awareness and Attention ? And of unconscious processing too — Basko
How would it have qualitative experiences if it's not aware? — Terrapin Station
Imagine you watch a great movie, you are so in it that you lose your sens of self, you lose your awareness of yourself. Same principle, imagine an AI having some qualitative experiences but doesn't have any mental capacity to be aware of it .. can't have realization, perception, or knowledge. — Basko
maybe what I experience as consciousness and what you experience as consciousness are not the same? — Pantagruel
As a nominalist, a relativist, and what I call a "perspectivalist," it's impossible for them to be the same. — Terrapin Station
But do you think they are different in the way two things of the same type are different, i.e. two oranges, or are they different in the way things of different kinds are different, i.e. an apple and an orange? — Pantagruel
Don't fall for that crap. If one cannot step into the same river twice then s/he cannot step into it even once. — creativesoul
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