Just a moment...
consciousness — that ultimate lens of being, which shapes our entire experience of life and makes blue appear blue and gives poems their air of wonder — is not a mental activity confined to the brain but a complex embodied phenomenon governed by the nervous-system activity we call feeling.
Maria Popova • I Feel, Therefore I Am: Neuroscientist Antonio Damasio on Consciousness and How the Feeling-Tone of the Body Underscores the Symphony of the Mind
The center of our conscious life is called ego. It has two concurrent characteristics: It is functional in that it is the strong grounded activating principle by which we make intellectual assessments and judgments, show feelings appropriately, and relate skillfully to other people. It can also be neurotic when it becomes attached, addicted, dualis
... See moreDavid Richo • How to Be an Adult: A Handbook on Psychological and Spiritual Integration
Nothing so eludes conscious inspection as consciousness itself. This is why the root of consciousness has been called, paradoxically, the unconscious.
Alan Watts • The Book: On the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are
Awareness can happen in the depths—below the surface of the sensory realm
Communication
Play
Use of tools
Behaviour, in this context, is a biological adjustment by means of movements and all kinds of movement-related physiological activity
Communication and play yields symbolic games and, more importantly, language
Interaction between s... See more
Evan Thompson • Consciousness
two possibilities. One calls for actual neural projections from the “affect complex” to the “posterior sensory set” and vice versa. The other possibility calls for approximate simultaneity of activations in the two sets, resulting in the production of a time-based ensemble. In either option, the ultimate realization of a conscious mind depends on b
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