Al Bell,
I am composing this prior to reading any other posts, ‘consciousness’ in my experience is not a single unified experience. It seems to have different component and they seem to have variable expression and states.
So as I have stated I tend to see it more as a rubric under which we place a lot of separate events, but then people in conversation often just say the word ‘consciousness’ as though it has one unitary meaning, which is what I object to.
As someone who has had long term sleep disturbance, I have experienced a wide variety of states which seem to partake of different aspects and levels of the blob labeled as ‘consciousness’. So one thing commonly referred to is ‘awareness’. And that seems to vary widely in what it means, even when asleep it seems there are various levels of ‘awareness’, we respond to sounds and stimuli, even though we are not ‘awake’. So the first is to establish the base level of ‘not responsive’ or appearing to not be aware of stimuli or at least able to respond to stimuli. So there is the state of ‘no response to stimuli’, which can be loud sounds, shaking or even the application of things that are generally considered ‘painful’ or ‘extremely uncomfortable’. And there seem to be times when humans are in this state where they are ‘non-responsive’, they can be shaken, yelled at, have pressure applied to nerve points under the skin and they do not seem to ‘respond’. And that is without considering the states that they are aware and not able to respond, due to nerve damage or things like ketamine. So even at the base line we get right into the depths. There are states where people do not have awareness of stimuli, they do not seem to respond to stimuli, they are ‘unconscious’ but then there is a category in which people are aware and having experiences, yet unable to show that in any way. So right away we get into the duality of personal experience and observable events from the outside and ‘inside’.
So with those caveats, I have noticed many different levels of awareness in my own experience, there are times of semi awareness on the edges of waking and sleeping, the transitions through tem. Then there seem to be the partial states where around sleep I seem to be aware of some aspects of ‘personal experience’ and not others, aware of memories and thoughts but not the radio next to the bed, aware of the radio show but not my body. And all sorts of variation, which also seem related to levels of awareness in dream states, in dreams it seems that the events are composed of ‘partial’ experiences, all visual at times, visual and somatic at others, verbal or emotional and verbal cognition. All changing and variable.
And so to when entering the different levels of ‘awake’ as opposed to ‘not really awake’, upon waking getting up, arousing from a deep sleep, there seems to be mainly ‘awareness’ of the body and maybe some ‘verbal cognition’ and sometimes ‘memory’ . There seems to be a great deal of variability in levels of arousal when first waking, slow semi aware events and full awareness events. Some days it seems as though I go through a range of awareness, staring with partial awareness of physical sensations, some thoughts and memories, and mainly trained habits, gradually moving into more awareness and integration with events. Some days I fell always half asleep, others I wake fully ‘awake’ and aware and go through the day that way. But it seems that even awareness rises and falls during the day and changes a lot over the course of time.
So even in one aspect of what I label as consciousness there seems to be a great deal of variability, a lot of awareness seems to be related to the levels of arousal and the sleep wake cycle of my body. Then there seems to be general awareness and focused, trained awareness and automatic awareness. Much less the exclusion for things from awareness.
So it goes with all things I would include in consciousness, and there seems to be a lot of over lap: awareness, interaction, response, verbal cognition, visual cognition, memory of many types, pattern awareness, comparison, concentration, volition, ‘ability to compose’, composure and self control.
So that is just the start of the discussion….