Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Types of Consciousness: The Diversity Problem

View through CrossRef
Consciousness research has a cognitive-diversity problem. Any view that holds that attention is either necessary for consciousness or that attention precedes conscious awareness confronts the difficulty that the theoretical categorization of attention is as diverse as the categorization of intelligent cognition, but consciousness is typically referred to as a single and unified capacity. On the one hand, we have a multiplicity of kinds of attention. On the other hand, we use a monolithic “phenomenal” notion of consciousness to define the dependency of consciousness on all these diverse kinds of attention. Since attention is defined in terms of a diverse variety of functions, a lot more needs to be said with respect to the claim that attention is either necessary for consciousness or that attentional processing precedes conscious awareness. Is this dependency based on the diverse cognitive functions of attention? If so, why conceive of consciousness as a single informationally unified cognitive capacity? What does the multiplicity of kinds of attention entail for consciousness research? This is the “diversity problem.” This article argues that consciousness should be also considered as a diverse set of capacities, based on the diversity of attention. While we have the intuition that consciousness is a unified perspective, the article shows that consistency demands this diverse approach. Since research on attention distinguishes a wide range of functions and levels of cognitive processing, the dependency of consciousness on attention entails diverse conscious capacities and diverse types of awareness beyond the distinctions between being awake, dreaming, and being minimally conscious.
Title: Types of Consciousness: The Diversity Problem
Description:
Consciousness research has a cognitive-diversity problem.
Any view that holds that attention is either necessary for consciousness or that attention precedes conscious awareness confronts the difficulty that the theoretical categorization of attention is as diverse as the categorization of intelligent cognition, but consciousness is typically referred to as a single and unified capacity.
On the one hand, we have a multiplicity of kinds of attention.
On the other hand, we use a monolithic “phenomenal” notion of consciousness to define the dependency of consciousness on all these diverse kinds of attention.
Since attention is defined in terms of a diverse variety of functions, a lot more needs to be said with respect to the claim that attention is either necessary for consciousness or that attentional processing precedes conscious awareness.
Is this dependency based on the diverse cognitive functions of attention? If so, why conceive of consciousness as a single informationally unified cognitive capacity? What does the multiplicity of kinds of attention entail for consciousness research? This is the “diversity problem.
” This article argues that consciousness should be also considered as a diverse set of capacities, based on the diversity of attention.
While we have the intuition that consciousness is a unified perspective, the article shows that consistency demands this diverse approach.
Since research on attention distinguishes a wide range of functions and levels of cognitive processing, the dependency of consciousness on attention entails diverse conscious capacities and diverse types of awareness beyond the distinctions between being awake, dreaming, and being minimally conscious.

Related Results

Flight Model: New Explorations into the Fundamental Principles of Intelligence and Consciousness
Flight Model: New Explorations into the Fundamental Principles of Intelligence and Consciousness
Constructing the fundamental principles of intelligence and consciousness has become a significant scientific challenge. The literature indicates that current theories of intellige...
An information integration theory of consciousness
An information integration theory of consciousness
Abstract Background Consciousness poses two main problems. The first is understanding the conditions that determine to what extent a...
Consciousness: In your own words
Consciousness: In your own words
Surprisingly little is known about how the general public understands consciousness, yet information on common intuitions is crucial to discussions and theories of consciousness. W...
Holographic Quantum Theory of Consciousness
Holographic Quantum Theory of Consciousness
There are two important questions in the science of consciousness. One is how a physical object such as the brain has conscious experience. The other is how consciousness affects o...
Consciousness, Matter, Brain Neural Activity and Telepathy
Consciousness, Matter, Brain Neural Activity and Telepathy
The purpose of this paper is to mathematically define cords of consciousness (CoC) and consciousness by the act of brain neural patterns, wherein neutral patterns represent synchro...
What is it like to be an AI bat?
What is it like to be an AI bat?
Consciousness is a natural phenomenon, familiar to every person. At the same time, it cannot be described in singular terms. The rise of Artificial Intelligence in recent years has...
Emergence ex Machina: Correlates of Consciousness
Emergence ex Machina: Correlates of Consciousness
Consciousness is a phenomenon that justifiably attracts pensive attention. And despite centuries of contemplation and decades of research, consciousness remains an elusive and poor...
Advanced theory of consciousness - Copia
Advanced theory of consciousness - Copia
The topic of this article is consciousness and, in it, I will theorize what consciousness is like and where it arises from. The work began to emerge and develop over time starting ...

Back to Top