]Huh? isn't the normal definition of subconscious, 'below conscious awareness'?
Yes it is, normally.
Are you using consciousness and conscious to refer to two quite different things?
Yes. Being conscious is different from being consciousness as they are from being unconscious. They are all related, but different states.
I'm accustomed to the usage where consciousness is what you have when you are conscious, so when you lose consciousness you are no longer conscious; and where consciousness is not aware of that which is subconscious.
That is understandable. I am using consciousness to say that is what I am.
Being conscious of being consciousness.
Being unconscious is like having that self awareness suspended in relation to the physical body.
Subconsciousness I tend to see as something which happens at a level of consciousness which I don't need to be consciously aware of - in fact it would get in the way of my experience of being in human form if I was aware of absolutely every thing which goes on regarding that human experience.
Are you referring to development or evolution?
I tend to think the two things are the same. Evolution is development and development is evolution.
consciousness has evolved as a function of the mammalian brain (perhaps others too) over at least tens of millions of years, which is long in human terms, short in cosmological terms. Consciousness in individuals develops as a consequence of that long evolution.
Consciousness is just consciousness. The brain is the thing which took the time.
Consciousness is not restricted to time in the same way. It can develop extremely quickly and change the way it sees itself, and everything else, overnight.
If consciousness (self awareness) has a brain which is damaged then within that context, it might have a difficult time of it trying to come to any particular understanding about its self. Or the state of the brain might have no particular affect on that, or something between those two extremes.
A brain in relation to the individual is not old. An individuals brain did not take eons of time and evolutionary tweaking to create.
Essentially brains have very little to do with consciousness and how consciousness evolves or self identifies.
Thoughts have something to do with both (and might be the bridge connecting the two) but consciousness has the final say in what thoughts it shall keep and which it shall discard, in relation to it self identity.
Consciousness decides what it is, in relation to its position - its experience and the data of its experience.
Brains do not require self awareness in order to function. But the level of the function will be more the mundane or mechanical.
We have no observations of anything not 'this side' of death, which is another reason....
It is the
same reason - not
another reason.
Nothing other than a large amount of evidence that consciousness is a certain kind of activity of certain kind of brain, and that, despite centuries of seeking, no evidence has been found to the contrary, no plausible means or mechanism has been described by which it might occur, and the idea would appear to contradict the most fundamental and reliable rules we know (
LoTD).
I submit that any reasonable person assessing that evidence would conclude that cessation of consciousness when brain activity ceases is 'beyond reasonable doubt'.
You also thus submit that anyone who chooses to think other possibilities must thus be 'unreasonable'?
Yet...apart from obvious beliefs which individuals and groups attach to such ideas (of afterlife realms and experiences) there is nothing at all unreasonable with the idea.
In relation to just the physical observation made by the living, it is not under question that "cessation of consciousness when brain activity ceases" is
exactly what is being observed. What is not being observed is not being observed because it
cannot be observed.
But it also cannot be known for sure. We each of course might get that chance when our body dies - to observe any continuation of who we are, if that is indeed what will happen.
Therefore no one individual or group of individuals can make such
claims either way and thus being asked to provide the evidence and fall short of doing so, be regarded as anything other than individuals or groups who want to
believe whatever they will, for whatever reasons they do and want me to believe the same - on faith - without that evidence.
That is simply asking me to convert to belief systems which have no relevance to me as an individuate consciousness or to this life I am now experiencing.
The best position has to be the most logical. Until absolute evidence is given, I remain open minded and free to continue thinking critically and remain skeptical to such notions either way.
I do not disregard the possibility of life after death and I do not accept any particular stories of what that might be like should it be real.
That's just the 'bad boy' I am.
