The key idea is what they call joint consciousness.
He outlines three forms of consciousness: the simple consciousness of animals and humans; the self-consciousness of humans, which includes reason and imagination; and cosmic consciousness, which transcends factual understanding.
But is self-consciousness necessary for consciousness?
The phrase ‘its pure self-consciousness’ seems to refer to consciousness of oneself as subject.
Consciousness —or at least the components of consciousness —is thus integrated into physical causation.
We speak of ‘consciousness of acts of experiencing’ rather than ‘consciousness of an experience’ for the same reason.)
This leads him to introduce the “world-simulation metaphor of consciousness”, according to which consciousness itself is essentially simulational and dreamlike.
In this section the issue of how consciousness is related to self-consciousness has been seen as a question of how it is related to “state self-consciousness”.
One can refer specifically to phenomenal consciousness, access consciousness, reflexive or meta-mental consciousness, and narrative consciousness among other varieties.
But what is the relationship between this “extra” consciousness and the consciousness we ordinarily believe in, the consciousness we pre-theoretically associate with humans and other animals?
Henry distinguishes Du Boisian double-consciousness from the double consciousness found in Hegel’s discussion of lordship and bondage in the Phenomenology of Spirit: Du Boisian double-consciousness
The main properties of access consciousness may be quite unlike those of qualitative or phenomenal consciousness, and those of reflexive consciousness or narrative consciousness may differ from both.
bodily awareness | consciousness | consciousness: and intentionality | Husserl, Edmund | intentionality | intentionality: phenomenal | meaning, theories of | Merleau-Ponty, Maurice | Reinach, Adolf | Schutz, Alfred | self-consciousness: phenomenological approaches to
consciousness | consciousness: and intentionality | consciousness: representational theories of | mental content: externalism about | mental content: narrow | mental imagery | perception: epistemological problems of | perception: the contents of | perception: the problem of | qualia | self-knowledge | sense-data
Instead of explaining the existence of consciousness in the biological world, they set themselves to explaining generic consciousness by identifying neural properties that can turn consciousness on and off and explaining specific consciousness by identifying the neural representational basis of conscious contents.
consciousness: and intentionality | consciousness: higher-order theories | consciousness: representational theories of | consciousness: unity of | dualism | epiphenomenalism | free will | functionalism | materialism: eliminative | panpsychism | qualia | qualia: knowledge argument | quantum theory: and consciousness | self-knowledge | universals: the medieval problem of | zombies
Once consciousness was back under discussion, there was a rapid proliferation of research with a flood of books and articles, as well as the introduction of specialty journals (The Journal of Consciousness Studies, Consciousness and Cognition, Psyche), professional societies (Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness—ASSC) and annual conferences devoted exclusively to its investigation (“The Science of Consciousness”).
animal: cognition | animal: consciousness | bodily awareness | consciousness | consciousness: higher-order theories | consciousness: seventeenth-century theories of | consciousness: unity of | indexicals | introspection | Kant, Immanuel: view of mind and consciousness of self | memory | mental content: nonconceptual | personal identity | self-consciousness: phenomenological approaches to | self-knowledge
belief | certainty | consciousness | consciousness: and intentionality | consciousness: higher-order theories | dualism | epistemology | folk psychology: as a theory | folk psychology: as mental simulation | introspection | justification, epistemic: foundationalist theories of | justification, epistemic: internalist vs. externalist conceptions of | Kant, Immanuel: view of mind and consciousness of self | knowledge: analysis of | knowledge: by acquaintance vs. description | mental content: causal theories of | mental content: externalism about | personal identity | physicalism | private language | propositional attitude reports | self-consciousness | self-deception | transcendental arguments
behaviorism | belief | Brentano, Franz | consciousness | consciousness: and intentionality | consciousness: higher-order theories | consciousness: representational theories of | consciousness: unity of | delusion | Descartes, René: epistemology | folk psychology: as a theory | folk psychology: as mental simulation | functionalism | Helmholtz, Hermann von | James, William | Kant, Immanuel: view of mind and consciousness of self | mental content: externalism about | mental content: narrow | mental imagery | pain | perception: the problem of | phenomenology | propositional attitude reports | qualia | Ryle, Gilbert | self-consciousness: phenomenological approaches to | self-deception | self-knowledge | Wundt, Wilhelm Maximilian
consciousness
noun cognition
- an alert cognitive state in which you are aware of yourself and your situation
Example: he lost consciousness
noun cognition
- having knowledge of
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behaviorism | belief | Brentano Franz | consciousness | consciousness and intentionality | consciousness higher-order theories | consciousness representational theories of | consciousness unity of | delusion | Descartes René epistemology | folk psychology as a theory | folk psychology as mental simulation | functionalism | Helmholtz Hermann von | James William | Kant Immanuel view of mind and consciousness of self | mental content externalism about | mental content narrow | mental imagery | pain | perception the problem of | phenomenology | propositional attitude reports | qualia | Ryle Gilbert | self-consciousness phenomenological approaches to | self-deception | self-knowledge | Wundt Wilhelm Maximilian