Mind
boggle. It is said that 'the mind boggles' (meaning an extreme state of incredulity, or rejection of a situation or idea). Nothing but minds can boggle-except computers? Perhaps this depends on whether computers are accepted as having, or not having, minds.
Richard Langton Gregory • The Oxford Companion to the Mind
Maybe consciousness is our way of condensing existence into a shareable form.
Greg Jackson • The Dimensions of a Cave
Consciousness is a distinctive state of mind, but the words “consciousness” and “mind” are often used as if they were synonymous and corresponded to the same process
Antonio Damasio • Feeling & Knowing
Mind, as defined earlier, is one way of referring to the active production and display of images arising from actual perception or from memory recall or from both. The images that constitute a mind flow in a never-ending cortege and, as they do so, describe all sorts of actors and objects, all sorts of actions and relationships, all sorts of qualit
... See moreAntonio Damasio • Feeling & Knowing
something radically contrary to common sense must be true about the fundamental structures of the mind and the world, while leaving us poorly equipped to determine where exactly the truth lies among the various weird possibilities.
Eric Schwitzgebel • The Weirdness of the World
For a taste of this mystery, simply close your eyes, calm your breathing, and try to still your mind. This will be next to impossible; thoughts and feelings will come up regardless. The calmer your mind is, the more disconnected and arbitrary will be the thoughts that arise. Images will appear out of nowhere, things you had long ignored or forgotte
... See moreRichard Smoley • The Dice Game of Shiva
Our minds evolved to understand the world, which requires that the world be understandable. And we are of this world.
George Musser • Putting Ourselves Back in the Equation
Something radically strange and counterintuitive must be true about the relationship between mind and world.
Eric Schwitzgebel • The Weirdness of the World
Our language-based theories of how our minds work don't often succeed in explaining how our minds actually work, for so many layers of the mind's operations occur prior to the stories and explanations we offer with language. Neuroscience is helpful in capturing more subconscious processes.