March 19, 2007
In The Principles of Psychology, William James describes five primary characteristics of consciousness.
According to James, consciousness is
- subjective and private
- constantly changing
- continuous
- noetic (has function of knowing, intentionality, content)
- characterized by selective attention
[cited in Consciousness Studies: Cross-Cultural Perspectives by K. Ramakrishna Rao, McFarland & Co., 2002, p. 33-46]
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- consciousness
March 15, 2007
An extensive annotated bibliography on consciousness and the brain is available here: www.consciousness-brain.org.
Arranged by author, the bibliography covers articles and books. Most of the entries have annotations, sometimes quite detailed summaries of the content. A few have links. The latest date I saw was 1996.
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- consciousness
March 11, 2007
A recent book by neurophysiologist R. Grant Steen on brain science: The Evolving Brain: The Known and the Unknown
Chapter 9 deals with consciousness; a few excerpts follow….
“We propose that consciousness arises only when a subject shows a combination of attention, perception, memory, and awareness.” p. 187
“Consciousness may be equivalent to neuronal synchronization. If so, does anything that increases neural synchronization also increase consciousness? Recent evidence shows that Buddhist monks are able to synchronize large brain areas as they meditate. This is consistent with the focused attention and increased consciousness that practitioners claim as a benefit of meditation. Equating synchronization to consciousness makes a fairly simple hypothesis, with the obvious appeal that it would be easy to test and easy to prove false.” p. 202
“It seems likely that consciousness is a correlate of complexity, an emergent property of the brain.” p. 208
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- consciousness
March 4, 2007
A new book on consciousness by Douglas Hofstadter is scheduled to be released tomorrow (March 5, 2007):
I Am a Strange Loop
Hofstadter’s home page is here: link
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- consciousness