can be quite conscious, and still be unaware of something — Mww
So is consciousness really synonymous with awareness, when there seems to be degrees of awareness within conciousness thanks to the process of attention? — Harry Hindu
you can't simultaneously be conscious and unaware of the same thing. — Pantagruel
It's not novel. It's roughly the first sense listed at dictionary.com: — bert1
The notion of consciousness is explained by opposing it to unconsciousness. — Banno
It seems to me impossible that while you are conscious of beauty you are unaware of beauty. Your approach is to suggest that you have an abstract knowledge called awareness and then failing to find that instantiated therefore no consciousness of awareness. You are begging your own question.while I am always conscious of beauty, I am often times completely unaware that a thing is beautiful. — Mww
I'm not seeing the difference. The reason we call a knocked-out person 'unconscious' is because they don't appear to have those properties. When they 'come to' again, we mark that they have done so by the apparent return of those properties. If those properties collectively, define consciousness it sounds almost exactly like the medical definition. — Isaac
How do you tell when a rock is sleeping?
And if you do not see this question as somewhat absurd, then perhaps that's an end to our discussion. — Banno
It seems to me impossible that while you are conscious of beauty you are unaware of beauty. — Pantagruel
You are begging your own question. — Pantagruel
I'll happily stipulate that we do have such background knowledge and awareness, — Pantagruel
But we don't have to limit the use of 'consciousness' (even partly defined in terms of behaviour) to humans. We can wonder, for example, if the responsive behaviour of rocks is evidence of their subjective experience. — bert1
It wouldn't count as 'evidence' of anything. You just redefined the term to include it. — Isaac
In all other potential cases it is impossible to distinguish concious from unconscious - indeed, everything is concious you say. — Isaac
So what's the use of the word? — Isaac
This is really interesting. Ask me if I am conscious and I will say, "yes". Ask a zombie if he is conscious and he will either say "no", or not respond. — Wheatley
To talk about which things we think are conscious, for example. Also to wonder about the experiences of other things. Consider:
John "I wonder what it's like to be a snail."
Jack: "Don't be silly, there's nothing it is like to be a snail. They're not conscious. Their brains aren't big enough to generate experience." — bert1
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