Search A Light In The Darkness

Tuesday 9 February 2010

Consciousness

People can be considered as conscious when they can perceive their thoughts and feelings, as well as their environment and can describe these perceptions to others. Thus consciousness enables people to deal in a way based on thoughts, memory, and flexibility with their environment, rather than coping in an automatic and rigid way.

Psychologist William James described consciousness as a stream which flows continuously, not as a succession of separate ideas or sensations.

Moral feelings expressions, qualities, values, standard of conduct and in concrete and practical terms, the way of life - all these aspects are common to human beings and form a vital part of our consciousness.

A complete system governing all aspects of human existence both individual and collective. Human beings have their own reality, not as a machine reacts mechanically as 'programmed' by their emotions and environment, but a true and unique creature possessing an obvious outwards aspect - the physical body - and a hidden, inner aspect - the mind emotion and soul.
Generally, there is nobody who is always in a normal state of consciousness all the time. The individual's state of consciousness is altered. Sensory deprivation sleeping, meditation, hypnosis and drug induced experiences are all examples of these altered states of consciousness. They all affect perception as well as other human functions such as respiration, cognition, motor coordination and memory.

When we go to sleep we lose awareness and fail to respond to a stimulus that would produce a response in the waking state. In a trance state people seen to be blind or deaf or immune to pain. Persons under hypnosis can for example recite forgotten memories. When awakened, they probably are unable to recall anything that happened while they were hypnotized. Children regularly practicing techniques that produce changes in mental states, such as whirling themselves. Dervishes in some cultures also whirl in circles, Buddhists concentrate on their breathing and Yogis contemplate specific objects. All these kinds of meditation are also altered state of consciousness
... read more ...