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2007-03-24 20:51:02 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

6 answers

Consciousness is all that will exist after the body is gone.

It can be experienced, if you are observant enough.

Several years ago I had an unusual experience concerning an uncle, a distant relative who lived over a thousand miles away.

While driving my car I suddenly felt the unmistakable presence of this relative that I hardly even knew. He was more like someone I had heard about than someone I knew. It was very strange; it felt as though I was momentarily lifted right out of my physical body. I seemed to be suspended somehow beyond space and time, bathed in a love so intense It felt like I could have just disappear into it at any moment if It would have let me. It only lasted for a few seconds, but it seemed to last forever at the same time. I realize how crazy this must sound. The experience was so strong that at first I was afraid I was loosing my grip on reality. I finally managed to chalk it up to an over active imagination.

Three days later I got a call from my aunt telling me that this uncle we are talking about had gone into a coma and died the day I had the experience. It felt like ice water had been poured down my back when she told me this. I had lost any real ideas of God or faith and had become somewhat of an atheist. Needless to say this experience caused me to rethink some of the conclusions I had come to.

I feel blessed to now understand that even in our darkest confusion something loves us so much that it went out of its way to assist me and bring me back to a state of absolute certainty about Gods love for us.
During the experience it seemed like there was a vast amount of information that I was somehow allowed access to. One thing that I came away from this experience understanding beyond any shadow of a doubt was that any Idea that God is unhappy with us or would judge or allow us to be punished for any reason is simply impossible.

I can’t explain the love I felt with words. They simply don’t make words big enough or complete enough to do this. The only way I can begin to convey this love to you is to say that there was simply nothing else there. Nothing but love. No hint of judgment, no displeasure of any sort. It is as though God sees us as being as perfect as we were the day we were created. It is only in our confused idea of ourselves that we seem to have changed.

I hope this is of some help to you. Good luck. Love and blessings.

Your brother don

2007-03-25 03:30:28 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I have the exact same question with you.

here's what i think. consciousness is what makes a living being sentient. or in other words, thing that makes a living being acknowledges it's existance. thus it can be argued that -in general- animals dont have it, and thats why we dont have any ethical issues when we want to kill them for food.

or consciousness is what we called thought, thats why, -and i do believe- there is a saying, "i think therefore i am" because there is no way you can acknowledge, or even question your existance without thinking, therefore those who do not think do not understand the perception of existence, therefore they can reffered to as "they aren't" -as in the saying- instead they live as if they are just a programed system, which -i believe- explains what we know as instinct.

do you agree with me up to this point?

The real question is what Consciousness is made of?

is it a form of particles, or wave, or both just as light is argued to be.
or is it constructed from exotic and unknown material, waiting to be discovered.
Bottom line is, can our physical law acknowledges, explains, or even theoritically fabricate Consciousness?

And for those who never bother to think about this question, they prefer to address consciousness with a more common term..... Spirit

2007-03-25 08:00:30 · answer #2 · answered by @lun 2 · 0 0

It is being aware of things in an intelligent way.

2007-03-25 04:01:08 · answer #3 · answered by Michael M 6 · 0 0

Your conscience is to acknowledge the gver of a conscience.

2007-03-25 04:31:21 · answer #4 · answered by celticremark 2 · 0 0

In the evolutionary cybernetic approach, consciousness is not some kind of mysterious entity that evades all forms of scientific analysis. Consciousness is rather a subtle and complex form of organization characterizing cybernetic systems or "agents". Consciousness allows these systems to interact in a purposeful, intelligent and sensitive way with their complex and changing environment. Because consciousness in its every-day sense is such a vague and ambiguous concept, we will try to explain it by subdividing it in its different aspects, starting from its most simple and universal properties, that are shared by all cybernetic agents, and building up towards its most advanced features, that can as yet only be found in humans, who occupy the provisionally highest level of the metasystem hierarchy.
A cybernetic agent is defined as a control system that interacts with its environment in such a way as to maximally achieve its goals or values. For natural systems, these goals are all derived from the overriding goal of maximizing fitness, i.e. survival, growth and reproduction. A cybernetic agent steers towards it goal by executing the appropriate actions, taking into account the feedback it gets through its senses.


Sensation
The first, and most primitive, form of consciousness may be called sensation. To achieve its goals, or more specifically to survive, a cybernetic agent must be be able to perceive or sense its situation. The situation is determined by the state of environment and of the agent with respect to the agent's goals, and in particular by the deviation between the present state and the desired or goal state. Sensation is achieved through the system's sensors, which translate phenomena in the environment into internal information that makes sense with respect to the system's goals. A sensed deviation automatically triggers a corresponding action that would compensate for the deviation, in what may be called a "simple reflex".
The most rudimentary example of such a system is the thermostat, which senses the temperature in a room, determines the difference between the sensed temperature and the desired temperature, and activates the heating element if the difference is too great. The capabilities of sensation of a thermostat are the simplest one imaginable: it can sense only one variable, temperature, and only two values for that variable (i.e. one bit), "temperature too low" and "temperature high enough". More complicated systems may be able to sense many variables independently (e.g. temperature and humidity) and many different values for each variable, each triggering an appropriate action. Still, we would not yet say that such sensing agents are "aware" of their environment.


Awareness
At the next level of complexity, which we call "complex reflexes" in the theory of metasystem transitions, separate sensations do not automatically lead to separate actions. Different sensations are rather integrated into an overall representation of the situation, which is compared with an overall representation of the system's goals. Different sensations and goals interact inside the cybernetic agent's "nervous system", affecting the internal, "mental" state of the system. The action that the agent eventually takes is determined by its internal state, which is the result of all previous sensations and goals, and the present perception. There is no longer an immediate connection between sensation and action. Rather the agent is affected by the whole of all previous and present sensations. Therefore, we may interpret the agent's mental state as not only as embodying not only a sensation of the present situation, but a global feeling or awareness determined by goals, past and present sensations.

Experience
At the next metasystem level, which we call "learning" or "associating", the agent's decision about which action to take is no longer determined directly by its state of awareness. The decision-making mechanism will now adapt or change, because the agent will learn from its experience, thus becoming ever more effective in its actions. As a result, at different times it may react differently to the same sequence of sensations. Now not only the mental state of the agent is affected by its sensations, but also the structure of the mental system with which it interprets the sensations. This also means that initially identical agents that undergo different sequences of sensations will start to react differently. Because of their individual experience they will develop their own personality, character, or world view. As a result the same phenomenon will be experienced in different, unique ways by different agents, having a different meaning for each of them.

Self-awareness, reflection
Learning agents are still dependent on the environment to create new associations between sensations. At the next level of "thinking", agents become capable of creating their associations themselves, thanks to their capacity to symbolize experiences, and combine symbols into novel combinations that have never been experienced as such. At this level, the agent becomes aware of its own experiences, so that it can examine, analyse, integrate and manipulate these experiences. The agent also becomes aware of itself as an agent, similar to, but different from, other agents. It becomes capable of reflection or introspection, observing its own cognitive processes as if they were external to it. This allows the agent to be creative, to imagine situations and ways of achieving them, without ever having experienced them directly. It also allows the agent to improve its own mental functioning, to become more "conscious" of itself and the world.

2007-03-25 03:54:15 · answer #5 · answered by ♥!BabyDoLL!♥ 5 · 0 0

a dusty mirror

2007-03-25 04:12:22 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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