Difference between revisions of "Conscious Experience"

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== Relation to other connotations of consciousness ==
 
== Relation to other connotations of consciousness ==
 
+
The following sections mirror the distinctions of the various concepts on the page [[consciousness]].
== Idea for Definition v1 ==
 
A promising choice is to use somewhat phenomenological terminology in defining the term
 
conscious experience, referring to the totality of how experience 'reveals itself' to an
 
experiencing subject, how the experiencing subject finds itself experiencing, or how the
 
"the world" appears to it.
 
 
 
One could opt for a more approachable terminology and define the term conscious experience to denote totality
 
of impressions, feelings, thoughts, perceptions, etc. which an experiencing subject
 
lives through at a particular instant of time.
 
 
 
== Relation to other definitions/descriptions of the phenomenon ==
 
The idea would be to come up with a definition above that is (most) general and allows to reduce to other notions.
 
E.g.:
 
- The connotation of perceiving a stimulus consciously (or not) simply concerns one specific aspect, or element, of conscious experience as defined above.
 
 
 
Generally, the hope for a more systematic account would be to describe how other connotations result from this general definition in terms of specifications. E.g., one could consider properties, elements, parts, features of conscious experience in order to arrive at qualia of different sorts... (?)
 

Revision as of 09:46, 15 June 2020

Various different connotation of consciousness exist, cf. the page on consciousness. This page provides a general definition of conscious experience and seeks to describe the relation to other connotation of consciousness. The general definition is inspired by the phenomenological reading of phenomenal consciousness.

Definition

In informal terms, the goal of the following definition is to refer to the totality of how "the world" appears to us at a particular instant of time. One could also paraphrase this as referring to how we find ourselves at a particular instant of time, or as referring to the experience which reveals itself at a particular instant of time. 'Instant' can be taken as a variable that refers either to a psychological or to a physical conception thereof.

Definition
We define conscious experience to refer to the totality of impressions, feelings, thoughts, perceptions, etc. which an experiencing subject lives through at a particular instant of time.

The definition is thus relative to experiencing subjects and the reference changes with time.

Relation to other connotations of consciousness

The following sections mirror the distinctions of the various concepts on the page consciousness.