Do we know how it works? If we don't know how it works, do we really know what it is? — mew
'm sure it would have been correct to say that even before any scientific enquiry we knew what water and trees were. An understanding of particle physics doesn't seem necessary. — Michael
Does this work for all kinds of things? Either we are talking about doors or about the concept of numbers what you said applies? — mew
Aren't there things that we need to know how they work in order to say that we know what they're really are?
For example, if we don't know how water is constituted, we might think that it is the substance out of which everything is constituted and then say that this is what it really is, not just something for us to drink.
Do you mean that what it is depends simply on the context of our discussions? Can't we just use the word wrongly? — mew
If in daily someone asked me, I would say that to be conscious is to recognize that I'm having an experience. But this implies that I'm also aware of myself, so then how is self-consciousness different from consciousness? And how science or philosophy use these words differently? — mew
Do we know how it works? If we don't know how it works, do we really know what it is? — mew
Consciousness is awareness of the outside world and that is immanent in all living things. — TheMadFool
Do you mean that plants are conscious the same way humans are? — mew
Are these books you mentioned easy to understand? Or do you know any other books or sites where I can read about philosophical ideas in easier language? — mew
Thank you, even though I don't understand at all what you mean in your second paragraph — mew
If plants are conscious but their reactions are just automatic, — mew
I meant to explain that there is a sense of "self-consciousness" that doesn't refer to the mere outcome of turning one's own gaze inside, as it were, and contemplate what it is one is feeling, experiencing, etc., but rather is a form of critical reflection on what it is that is required to make sense of one's ability to know the world on the basis of experience, or to know what it is one ought to do (and that one is actually doing or intending to do -- i.e. practical self-knowledge) on the basis of practical deliberation, and that reveals explicitly features of our rational abilities that are necessarily operative in every mature human being, including those who don't critically reflect on them. Immanuel Kant is one fellow who pioneered this sort of reflection and Sebastian Rödl is traveling a parallel path. — Pierre-Normand
What do you mean? — mew
Awareness of the environment is a basic feature of consciousness. — TheMadFool
And then I think that it is difficult to be conscious of something else and not to be conscious of myself or to be conscious of myself and not be conscious of other things. I think that one implies the other. You mean that these philosophers say that self-consciousness is not about that? — mew
What is then the difference between awareness and consciousness under this view? — mew
According to neuroscientist and quasi-philosopher, Antonio Damasio, consciousness is self-awareness + awareness of one's environment (i.e. immediate surroundings). — Maw
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.