infobox Book See Wikipedia WikiProject Novels or Wikipedia WikiProject Books name Waking the Moon title orig translator image image Waking the Moon.jpg 200px image caption HarperCollins edition cover art. author Elizabeth Hand illustrator cover artist country language English language English series genre publisher HarperCollins release date 1994 english release date media type Print pages isbn preceded by followed by Waking The Moon is a 1994 novel by Elizabeth Hand . It was the winner of the James Tiptree, Jr. Award and The 1996 Mythopoeic Award for Adult Literature. It is set mainly in The University of the Archangels and St. John The Divine , a fictional University inspired by The Catholic University of America , mentioned in a few of Hand s novels. About 100 pages were cut from the US edition. Plot summary Sweeney Cassidy starts out as a freshman at University, where she meets the mysterious Angelica and falls in love with the strange and beautiful Oliver. She gets tangled up in sinister, supernatural events involving the awakening of an ancient, malevolent goddess. According to the afterword for the short story The Bacchae , found in the collection Last Summer At Mars Hill , it is another trope on ancient Greek myth that prefigures Waking the Moon . They both involve murderous cults of women. Elizabeth Hand has said that she wanted to show that ancient goddess cultures were not all as peaceful and idyllic as we tend to think. ref http www.strangehorizons.com 2004 20041129 int hand a.shtml An interview with Elizabeth Hand ref Reception Terri Windling selected Waking the Moon as one of the best fantasy books of 1994, praising it as a suspenseful, panoramic story of murder, conspiracy, and ancient secret societies. ref Summation 1994 Fantasy, The Year s Best Fantasy and Horror Eighth Annual Collection , p.xvii ref Footnotes reflist References cite web title An interview with Elizabeth Hand last Morgan first Cheryl work StrangeHorizons.com url http www.strangehorizons.com ... more details
Infobox album See Wikipedia WikiProject Albums Name Waking Hours Type Album Artist Del Amitri Cover Del Amitri Waking Hours Album Cover.jpg Released July 1989 Recorded Park Lane, Glasgow Great Linford Manor , Milton Keynes Chipping Norton Recording Studios , Oxfordshire Genre Alternative rock Length 45 49 Label A&M Records A&M AMA9006 Producer Mark Freegard tracks 1, 2, 4, 6, 7 & 9 Gil Norton 3, w additional recording by Mark Freegard Hugh Jones producer Hugh Jones 8 5 & 10 w additional recording by Mark Freegard Last album Del Amitri album Del Amitri br 1985 This album Waking Hours br 1989 Next album Change Everything br 1992 Album ratings rev1 Allmusic rev1Score Rating 4.5 5 ref Allmusic class album id r5366 first Steve Spaz last Schnee ref rev2 rev2Score Waking Hours is the second studio album by Scottish alternative rock band Del Amitri , released in July 1989. It reached number 6 in the UK Albums Chart and featured one of the band s most famous songs, Nothing Ever Happens , which reached number 11 in the UK Singles Chart . The album s opening track, Kiss This Thing Goodbye , entered the top 40 of the US Billboard Hot 100 when released as a single music single for the second time. History Many Del Amitri fans consider Waking Hours to be the band s first real album. The post punk influence of the first album, Del Amitri album Del Amitri 1985 , had produced a sound radically different to the remainder of the band s output. It had been extremely difficult to find for many years, before its 2003 CD reissue, leaving many who became fans in the 1990s totally unaware of its existence. Waking Hours arguably represents Del Amitri s first mature record, and was certainly the first to bring them any mainstream success. Typically for Del Amitri the group never made two albums with the same band members , Waking Hours featured some recently introduced personnel new guitarist Mick Slaven and keyboard player Andy Alston . Despite some important creative input he contributed to the writing ... more details
Waking the Dragon Deffro r Ddraig is a proposed bronze sculpture which is to be built in Wrexham , North Wales . The sculpture will become the tallest public artwork in the UK, standing at 210 feet, symbolising the heritage and culture of the Welsh people and has been touted as the Welsh equivalent to the Statue of Liberty . ref http www.dailymail.co.uk news article 1254638 The 200ft Welsh dragon set tallest sculpture Britain.html ref The project will be funded through a combination of charitable donations, the purchase of steps within the tower which can be bought and inscribed for 2,000 each and investor finance. It will be made up of a 75 foot bronze dragon with a wingspan of approximately 150 feet, standing upon a 135 foot glass and steel tower, which would allow for panoramic views of Wrexham, its surrounding countryside and across the border into England . ref http www.leaderlive.co.uk news 85707 leader readers waking the dragon tower would benefit wrexham.aspx ref The project will also include a 100 seater caf bar, a 125 seater restaurant, an art centre and a gallery next to the tower. It will stand in a landscape of formal and informal pathways, oak trees and daffodil gardens, with the space immediately around the tower to be used to depict the Four Branches of the Mabinogi Four Branches of the Mabinogion, the collection of mythological tales of early Wales. It will sit adjacent to the A5 road Great Britain A5 and was hoped to be completed by August 2011. Now it is hoped to be completed by the 2012 Summer Olympics held in London. See also List of statues by height References Reflist External links http thewelshdragon.co.uk coord 52.9393 3.0453 display title Category Buildings and structures in Wales ... more details
orphan date July 2009 Waking the Tiger is a self help book by Peter A. Levine which presents therapeutic advice for healing past Psychological trauma trauma s. The techniques presented in the book are based on Somatic Experiencing , the naturalistic therapy developed by Levine. The book uses metaphors from classical mythology to illustrate how one could deal with trauma without being overwhelmed by facing head on, not the trauma, but its reflection in our nervous system . The book asserts that animals in the wild are persistently subject to threats yet rarely exhibit symptoms of trauma. The book s title is a symbol of returning to a more natural, energetically freer state, but also a more natural emotionally and intellectually freer state, being the goal of psychotherapy in general, including the particular approach developed by Levine. External links http www.primal page.com tiger.htm Another review http www.traumahealing.com Healing Trauma http www.integrazioneposturale.it varieftp basicquestions.pdf PDF Body Mind Integration nonfiction book stub Category 1997 books Category Self help books Category Mind body interventions ... more details
Waking Nightmares is a collection of horror genre horror stories by Ramsey Campbell , first published in 1991 by Tom Doherty . The first British edition was published in 1992 by Little, Brown . It contains an introduction by the author. The collection includes the following stories The Guide 1989 Next Time You ll Know Me 1988 Second Sight 1987 The Trick 1980 In the Trees 1986 Another World 1987 Playing the Game 1988 Bedtime Story 1986 Watch the Birdie 1984 Old Clothes 1985 Beyond Words 1986 Jack in the Box 1983 Eye of Childhood 1982 The Other Side 1986 Where the Heart Is 1987 Being an Angel 1989 It Helps If You Sing 1989 The Old School 1989 Meeting the Author 1989 short story stub Category 1991 short story collections Category Fantasy short story collections Category Single author horror short story collections ... more details
wiktionary Stream of consciousness may refer to Ostensibly unedited, spontaneous live or recorded performances, as in film, music, and dramatic and comic monologues, intended to recreate the raw experience of the person portrayed or the performer Stream of consciousness narrative mode , a narrative mode used as a literary, cinematic, theatrical, or lyrical technique Stream of consciousness psychology , in psychology stream of being also known as the mindstream Buddhism Stream of consciousness may also refer to Stream of Consciousness album Stream of Consciousness album , an album by Vision Divine Stream of Consciousness instrumental Stream of Consciousness instrumental , an instrumental song by Dream Theater on their album Train of Thought Stream of Consciousness The Outer Limits Stream of Consciousness The Outer Limits , an episode of The Outer Limits Stream of Consciousness, the fourth track on heavy metal band Kreator s 1989 album, Extreme Aggression disambiguation simple Stream of consciousness tr Bilin ak ... more details
unreferenced date February 2012 Infobox television episode Title Waking Moments Image File ST VOY Waking Moments.jpg 270px Caption A nightmare Voyager crew Series Star Trek Voyager Episode 13 Season 4 Production 182 Airdate Startdate 1998 01 14 Writer Andre Bormanis Director Alexander Singer Music David Bell composer David Bell Guests Mark Colson Dream Alien Jennifer Grundy Ensign Tarik Ergin Lt. Ayala Star Trek Ayala Prev Mortal Coil Star Trek Voyager Mortal Coil Next Message in a Bottle Star Trek Voyager Message in a Bottle Episode list List of Star Trek Voyager episodes List of Star Trek Voyager episodes NOTOC Waking Moments is the 81st episode of Star Trek Voyager , the 13th episode of the fourth season. The episode has an average rating of 4.2 5 on the official Star Trek website as of September, 2009. The episode is similar to the film Inception . Plot The episode opens with the dream sequences of Voyager senior staff. The two commonalities between the dreams are that they are all nightmares and that in each dream, an unknown alien appears towards the end of each dream. Upon waking, and reporting to their duty shifts on the bridge, the captain and first officer compare dreams, and when noting the common strange alien in their dreams, Tom Paris notes that the same alien appeared in his dream. At this point it is realized that Harry Kim has not reported for duty yet. After failing to respond to the bridge hails, Janeway takes Tuvok to Kim s quarters in an attempt to find out why he isn t responding to hails. Upon entering Kim s quarters, they find him asleep and are unable to wake him up. They take him to sickbay for further examination. The Doctor explains that Kim and several other crew members are in a hyper REM state and that he cannot wake them, even through medical means. The Doctor advises that everyone avoid going to sleep for the time being. It is realized that Voyager is experiencing contact with an alien race which lives out its life in a dream state. Chakotay ... more details
Waking Dreams is a short subject film made in 2004. The film was written and directed by John Daschbach. Cast Ben Shenkman Charles Tina Holmes Becky Stephanie McVay Mrs. Mills Kevin Lageman Patient Plot A corporate corporate officer executive named Charles is preparing for his vacation on a cruise. However, the office temp tells him that he is going to die on the cruise if he swims in the ocean, apparently to get eaten by a shark. Becky explains to the surprised Charles who believes it s a prank that she is an amateur psychic whose dreams predict the future. Charles dismisses her warnings, though he does take heed, and goes on the vacation, even swimming. When he returns, however, he finds that Becky has had a nervous breakdown , and is in a mental institution . Charles visits Becky, who is on medication, and explains his safety. Charles then promises her that he ll visit the next day. Charles leaves, wondering whether to cross the street or taking the subway... Reaction The film was critically acclaimed, getting an audience award for Best Short Film at the Boston Film Festival . http www.imdb.com title tt0400933 awards DVD release The film was released on digital video disc in the package of various short subject s, Celebrity Mix, released by TLA Video on January 17, 2006. http www.amazon.com dp B000CCW2MU Category 2000s short films ... more details
Waking in the Blue is a poem by Robert Lowell that was published in his book Life Studies and is a striking, early example of confessional poetry . Of the handful of poems from Life Studies in which Lowell explored his struggles with mental illness , this poem was one of Lowell s most forthwright admissions that he had serious mental problems. Though he doesn t discuss the exact nature of his mental illness in the poem, he does describe his hospitalization in a mental institution. Lowell s admission of having spent time in a mental institution was a brave one to make since, when he published the poem in 1959, public disclosure about mental illness was a serious social taboo. Composition Lowell wrote the first draft of the poem at the end of January 1958 in poetry 1958 while at the McLean Hospital in Belmont, Massachusetts Belmont near Boston . The title of that first draft was To Ann Adden Written during the first week of my voluntary stay at McLean s Mental Hospital . ref Hamilton, page 244 ref Ann Adden was a psychiatric fieldworker whom he had met while he was a patient at the Boston Psychopathic Hospital the previous year. In a manic state, Lowell became temporarily convinced that he was in love with her. ref Hamilton, page 240 ref The first draft was formally loose. However, the final draft was 25 lines shorter and in places rhyme and snatches of regular meter were introduced to tighten up the poem. Citation needed date May 2011 Cultural references The Meaning of Meaning is a book by the literary theorists I. A. Richards and C. K. Ogden . The Porcellian Club at Harvard . References Hamilton, Ian, Robert Lowell A Biography , Random House, New York, 1982. ISBN 039450965X. Footnotes reflist Robert Lowell poem stub Category American poems Category Works by Robert Lowell ... more details
Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Understanding Consciousness is a scientific philosophical text ref Velmans, M. 2000 Understanding Consciousness. London Routledge Psychology Press. ref ref Velmans, M. 2009 Understanding Consciousness Edition 2. London Routledge Psychology Press ref written by psychologist Max Velmans . The book combines scientific studies of consciousness with philosophy of mind . Part 1 reviews the strengths and weaknesses of all currently dominant theories of consciousness in a form suitable for undergraduates, postgraduates and researchers focusing mainly on dualism, physicalism, functionalism and consciousness in machines. Part 2 gives a new analysis of consciousness, grounded in its everyday phenomenology, which challenges presuppositions that form the basis of the dualism versus reductionist debate. It also examines the consequences for realism versus idealism, subjectivity, intersubjectivity and objectivity, and the relation of consciousness to brain processing. Part 3 gives a new synthesis, with a novel approach to understanding what consciousness is, and a novel approach to what consciousness does that pays particular attention to the paradoxes surrounding the causal interactions of consciousness with the brain. It also introduces reflexive monism , an alternative to dualism and reductionism that aims to be consistent with the findings of science ... enough attention to the Phenomenology philosophy phenomenology of consciousness, the condition of being aware of something . Reductionism, for example, attempts to reduce consciousness to being a state of the brain thus consciousness is nothing more than its neural causes and correlates. This, Velmans says, is guilty of breaking Leibniz s assertion that, in order for A to be identical to B that is, for consciousness ... of B. Velmans here argues that the subjective, phenomenal experience of consciousness is entirely unlike ... of consciousness are not identifiable with the physical brain states that arguably cause them ... more details
A Universe of Consciousness How Matter Becomes Imagination is the title of a 2000 book by biologists Gerald Edelman Gerald Maurice Edelman and Giulio Tononi . The book aims to explain the neural substrate of consciousness p. xii . It also reviews some ideas of brain organization and brain theory . See also Wider than the Sky Wider than the Sky The Phenomenal Gift of Consciousness , a similar book by Edelman DEFAULTSORT Universe Of Consciousness, A Category Biology books Category 2000 books Science book stub ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 Image Fetzer Consciousness Evolving.gif right 200px Consciousness Evolving is a book written by the Professor James H. Fetzer . It is collection of studies on the past, the present, and the future of consciousness . ref http www.benjamins.com cgi bin t bookview.cgi?bookid AiCR 2034 John Benjamins Book details for Consciousness Evolving AiCR 34& 93 Bot generated title ref References References Category Psychology books psych book stub ... more details
Unreferenced date September 2008 Prosperity consciousness is a term and teaching often referred to in New Age and New Thought communities, and it is a term sometimes used by financial professionals. It describes the belief that by opening one s mind to the financial opportunities in the world, and by living a life and having a perspective that welcomes financial resources, one will bring financial wealth into one s life. Prosperity consciousness is based primarily on a belief in the Law of Attraction and its use for attracting more wealth. External links http www.nightingale.com prod detail product Prosperity Consciousness.aspx Prosperity Consciousness by Fredric Lehrman 7 CD audio book on Nightingale Conant website http www.nomaduniversity.com Fredric Lehrman, Author of Prosperity Consciousness and Director of Nomad University http www.revmatthew.com onlinestudy2.html Science of Abundant Living teaching about prosperity consciousness http www.richbits.com Money Acqprospcon.pdf search prosperity 20consciousness Prosperity Consciousness article on Rich Bits website http www.psychicjournal.com archives 000320 000320f1.htm Psychic Journal article about prosperity consciousness Category New Age practices Category New religious movements Category Social psychology Category Financial terminology ... more details
consciousness . The politics of consciousnessConsciousness typically refers to the idea of a being ... consciousness in terms of one s political state of mind. For Marx, consciousness describes a person s political sense of self. That is, consciousness describes a person s awareness of politics. For Marx, an authentic consciousness was linked to understanding one s true position in History. While Hegel placed God behind the workings of consciousness in people, Marx saw the political economy ... century, many social movements and intellectuals have developed this use of consciousness. False consciousness Main False consciousness In Marx s view, consciousness was always political, for it was always ... s own subordination, which comes about through ideology, is, for Marx, false consciousness . That is, conditions ... manifesto ch02.htm The Communist Manifesto , ch. 2 . ref Consciousness and the political economy For Marx, consciousness is a reflection of the political economy. A person s thoughts tend to be shaped by his or her political and economic circumstances. He famously wrote, It is not the consciousness ... their consciousness. blockquote Perhaps Marx s greatest contribution to modern thought... is his comprehensive investigation into the role of Ideology, or how social being determines consciousness, which ... religious systems, philosophical positions, ethical values are, naturally enough, products of consciousness ... Consciousness and social movements Many social movements have loosely followed Marx s thinking on consciousness. Attaining consciousness, many believe, means finding one s true historical path, as opposed to the propaganda dispensed by the ruling elites. Thus, the feminist movement spoke of consciousness raising and many South African activists have subscribe to a Black Consciousness Movement , which ..., the apartheid regime . In the latter example, for many South African Blacks, consciousness ... . For many African Americans, consciousness has meant identifying and discrediting forms of White ... more details
Wikify date March 2012 refimprove date September 2010 distinguish Collective consciousness Social consciousness is consciousness shared within a society . It can also be defined as social awareness to be aware of the problems that different societies and communities face on a day to day basis to be conscious of the difficulties and hardships of society. Acquired A subject with an acquired social consciousness derives his or her viewpoint from the mainstream culture. ref name ebscohost http search.ebscohost.com login.aspx?direct true&db psyh&AN 2005 09391 004&site ehost live ref Awakened A subject with an awakened social consciousness explores alternatives to the dominant cultural viewpoint. ref name ebscohost Expanded A subject with an expanded social consciousness strongly identifies with their marginalized group. ref name ebscohost References reflist Category Sociological terms socio stub kk pl wiadomo spo eczna ru uk ... more details
Unreferenced auto yes date December 2009 Subjective consciousness refers to a state of consciousness , in which a person is constantly aware of his or her self as well as outside factors. The study of this state has achieved high priority in the modern philosophy of mind , the mind body problem or consciousness studies , as made popular by, e.g., David Chalmers . Subjective consciousness refers to the inner, private experience of mainly human beings. It is associated with the qualia made famous by Chalmers et al. This state is not to be confused with objective consciousness or the neural correlates of consciousness though this confusion existed for much of the 20th century attendant on the rise of behaviourism and positivism and the decline of the interest in introspection made popular in the 19th and early 20th century by Edmund Husserl and William James . The lack of this state, as occasionally implied by physicalism physicalists and their ilk, would raise the question of who is the internal observer, for which all the neural processing takes place. To eliminate this internal observer leads to infinite regress . The alternative is to accept the observer or homunculus . This state is also associated with ancient Hindu studies of the mind as well as to many modern teachers, such as the Dalai Lama , U.G. Krishnamurti or G.I. Gurdjieff . DEFAULTSORT Subjective Consciousness Category Consciousness studies Psych stub ... more details
distinguish Self awareness Self concept Self image Self perception Self consciousness is an Acute medicine ... feeling of self consciousness may occur when one realizes that one is being watched or observed ... than others. Unpleasant feelings of self consciousness are sometimes associated with shyness or paranoia . According to Schopenhauer , man can, through self consciousness, make a choice between affirming .... Adolescence is believed to be a time of heightened self consciousness. A person with a chronic tendency toward self consciousness may be shyness shy or introvert ed. ref W. Ray Crozier Shyness ... context is being conscious of oneself as an individual, self consciousness, being excessively conscious of one s appearance or manner, can be a problem at times. Self consciousness is often .... In a positive context, self consciousness may affect the development of identity, for it is during periods of high self consciousness that people come the closest to knowing themselves objectively. Self consciousness affects people in varying degrees, as some people are constantly self monitoring ... s frequently distinguish between two kinds of self consciousness, private and public. Private self consciousness is a tendency to introspect and examine one s inner self and feelings. Public self consciousness is an awareness of the self as it is viewed by others. This kind of self consciousness can result in self monitoring and social anxiety. Both private and public self consciousness are viewed ... levels of self consciousness affect behavior , as it is common for people to act differently when ... anonymity and temporarily decrease self consciousness see deindividuation . This can lead to uninhibited ... Main Outline of self Introspection Self awareness Self concept Reflexive Self Consciousness Looking glass self Shyness Surveillance References McGaughey, William 2001 . Rhythm and Self Consciousness ... Penguin this book has a chapter explaining self consciousness . references External links ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 In biological psychology , extended consciousness is an animal animal s autobiographical self perception. Extended consciousness is said to arise in the brain of animals with substantial capacity for memory and reason . It does not necessarily require language . The perception of a historic and future self arises from a stream of information from the immediate environment and from neural structures related to memory. A neurology department chairman from University of Iowa medical school College of Medicine popularized the concept. Antonio Damasio theorized extended consciousness to arise in the structures in the human brain he described as image spaces and dispositional spaces . Image spaces imply areas where senses sensory impressions of all types are processed, including the focused awareness of the core consciousness . Dispositional spaces include convergence zones, which are networks in the brain where memories are processed and recalled, and where knowledge is merged with immediate experience. Image processing in the cerebrum is regionally specific to various senses, but is highly distributed and interconnected, with images such as visual, spatial and perhaps linguistic impressions stored in diverse areas then assembled when recalled as a thought. Likewise, neural convergence zones are widely distributed in the lobes of the cerebral cortex . While humans are theorized to share extended consciousness with some animals, theorized neural mechanisms for extended consciousness do not provide answers to philosophy philosophical or Cosmology metaphysics cosmological questions about consciousness such as why we perceive ourselves as a limited part of a larger universe . External links http www.creativitycountry.net.au creativity consciousness.htm Layers or levels of consciousness? http www.time.com time magazine article 0,9171,32273,00.html Time Magazine 1999 Mystery Of Consciousness DEFAULTSORT Extended Consciousness Category Consciousness ... more details
The journal Consciousness and Cognition ISSN 1053 8100 provides a forum for scientific approaches to the issues of consciousness , voluntary control, and self. ref Baars, B.J., & Banks, W.P. 1992 . On returning to consciousness Editorial , Consciousness and Cognition , pp. 1 2 ref It features empirical research in the form of regular articles and short reports and theoretical articles. Book reviews, integrative theoretical and critical literature reviews, and tutorial reviews are also published. The journal aims to be both scientifically rigorous and open to novel contributions. The journal s editor in chief is William Banks. Bruce Bridgman, James Enns, Axel Cleeremans and Antti Revonsuo are associate editors http www.elsevier.com wps find journaleditorialboard.cws home 622810 editorialboard . It is an official journal of the Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness . Bernard Baars ref http vesicle.nsi.edu users baars cv.html Baars CV ref and William Banks ref http psych.pomona.edu DrBanksWebPage Resume Vita.htm Banks Vita ref were the founding co editors of the journal. In 2011 papers from the second Online Consciousness Conference will be published in a special double issue. Topics of interest include but are not limited to Implicit memory Selective and directed attention Priming, subliminal or otherwise Neuroelectric correlates of awareness and decision making Assessment of awareness protocol analysis The properties of automaticity in perception and action Relations between awareness and attention Models of the thalamocortical complex Blindsight The neuropathology of consciousness and voluntary control Pathology of self and self awareness The development of the self concept in children Notes references External links http www.sciencedirect.com science? ob ... Consciousness and Cognition http assc.caltech.edu Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness ASSC homepage DEFAULTSORT Consciousness And Cognition Category Consciousness ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2006 For Hegel the unhappy consciousness German das ungl ckliche Bewu tsein is associated with a stage in the history of the development of the freedom of self consciousness . This stage of Hegel s Phenomenology of Spirit follows after the phase of the master slave consciousness. The three phases are Stoicism, followed by scepticism or cynicism, followed by the ascetic unhappy consciousness. Stoicism, Epicureanism and Hedonism For Hegel the resolution of the master slave dialectic in stoicism , hedonism and epicureanism is not lasting. The period in history Hegel associates with this is from the time of Alexander the Great on through the times of the Roman Empire. This Roman Stoicism is for Hegel something of a false resolution of the master slave dialectic, it emphasises only the freedom of thought. In the Stoic s distancing of himself from the world of desires, of pain and pleasure he achieves a freedom of conscience, but that he ignores the concrete reality is apparent in the unsatisfactory resolution of the master slave dialectic. He is ignoring the reality of the dissatisfaction apparent for both master and slave. Scepticism and Cynicism So for Hegel history shows that stoicism is replaced by scepticism and cynicism. Here again the complete disbelief in society, rather than the reasoned and calculated disbelief of the stoic, eventually leads to a dissolution ... Consciousness In this externalisation of the good from human affairs we see forming what Hegel calls the unhappy consciousness . This, Hegel associates with much of the early Christian era when people ..., each of these stages is an attainment, the achievement of the unhappy consciousness is the truth of the will, which ... consciousness are given some resolution in the person of Jesus Christ. Here the temporal and eternal ... an unhappy consciousness since all goodness is alienated in God or in the afterlife. DEFAULTSORT Unhappy Consciousness Category Consciousness studies Category Phenomenology Category Arguments in philosophy ... more details
In Ant nio Dam sio s theory of consciousness , core consciousness describes a hypothesized level of awareness facilitated by brain neural structures of most animals that allows them to be aware of and react to their environment. ref name Damasio s book Damasio, A. 1999 . The Feeling of What Happens Body, Emotion and the Making of Consciousness. Vintage, London ref In Dam sio s theory, core consciousness occurs when the brain s representation devices generate a representation of the relationship between the organism the self and an environmental stimulus. The process preceding core consciousness is protoself , the one following it is extended consciousness . ref http www.drmillslmu.com evolpsyc spr2004 lukaszew pwrpt 03 02 04.ppt ref The hierarchy of consciousness As Damasio argues throughout his work, consciousness is far from monolithic , ref Floyd Merrell, Sensing Corporeally 2003 p. 160 ref but rather exists in a hierarchy of stages, each building upon and dependent on its predecessor s . Core consciousness forms the middle element in this sequence. The essence of core consciousness is the very thought of you the very feeling of you as one individual being involved in the process of knowing of your existence and of the existence of others . ref Damasio, in Merrell, p. 161 ref Thus a sense of being..is what Damasio describes as core consciousness ref Marcus West, Feeling, Being, and the Sense of Self 2007 p. 17 ref what Gerald Manley Hopkins memorably described as my self being, my consciousness and feeling of myself, that taste of myself...which is more distinctive than the taste ... descriptions the proto self first order neural maps , core consciousness second order neural maps , and extended consciousness involving third order neural maps . ref E. S. Person et al eds., The American ... of core consciousness . ref Phil Rich, Attachment and Sexual Offending 2005 p. 43 ref Physical origins ... Core Consciousness Category Biopsychology ... more details
Cleanup rewrite date September 2011 Cosmic consciousness is the idea that the universe exists as an interconnected network of consciousness , with each conscious being linked to every other. Sometimes this is conceived as forming a collective consciousness which spans the cosmos , ref J. J. Semple The Backward ... mushrooms have asserted that they have had direct experience of the cosmic consciousness. ref ... a theory which claimed that cosmic consciousness lies in a mystic state above and beyond self awareness self consciousness , the natural state of man s consciousness, just like animal consciousness lies below. ref Richard M. Bucke Cosmic Consciousness , p. 19, Cosimo Inc., 2007 ISBN 978 1596054790 ref In 1909 William James , postulated the existence of a cosmic consciousness into which individual ... . New York The Viking Press. ref Studies Cosmic Consciousness A Study in the Evolution of the Human Mind is the title of a 1901 book by Richard Maurice Bucke . ref Richard M. Bucke Cosmic Consciousness ... M. Bucke Cosmic Consciousness at Sacred texts.com html text http www.sacred texts.com eso cc index.htm ref In it, Bucke developed a theory involving three stages in the development of consciousness the simple consciousness of animals the self consciousness of the mass of humanity encompassing reason, imagination, etc. and cosmic consciousness an emerging faculty and the next stage of human development. ref Richard M. Bucke Cosmic Consciousness , pp. 19 82, Cosimo Inc., 2007 ISBN 978 1602069671 ... Gumilev , Carl Jung tracing the transformations of human consciousness in course of history. According to P. D. Ouspensky , as man evolves into higher states of consciousness, e. g. cosmic consciousness ... were gifted in the direction of cosmic consciousness but then developed this awareness ... use of the concept of cosmic consciousness introduced by Bucke in 1901 is even lengthier. This list ... reflist Sources Krishna , G. 2004 . What is Cosmic Consciousness? , Bethel Publishers. Camille ... more details
orphan date August 2008 The Consciousness Industry is a term coined by author and theorist Hans Magnus Enzensberger , which identifies the mechanisms through which the human mind is reproduced as a social product. Foremost among these mechanisms are the institutions of mass media and education . According to Enzensberger, the mind industry does not produce anything specific rather, its main business is to perpetuate the existing order of man s domination over man. Hans Haacke elaborates on the consciousness industry as it applies to the arts in a wider system of production, distribution, and consumption. ref Haacke, p. 273 ref Haacke specifically implicates museums as manufacturers of aesthetic perception that fail to acknowledge their intellectual, political, and moral authority rather than sponsoring intelligent, critical awareness, museums thus tend to foster appeasement. ref Haacke, p.280 ref See also Institutional Critique The Consciousness Industry On Literature, Politics and the Media Hans Magnus Enzensberger Hans Haacke References Reflist Enzensberger, H. M. 1974 . The Consciousness Industry On Literature, Politics and the Media. New York Continuum Books Seabury Press. Michael Roloff, editor and translator. The companion volume to this title that I edited there is POLITICS CRIME. Haacke, H. 1983 2006 . Museums Managers of consciousness, in Hans Haacke For real Works 1959 2006. M. Fl gge & R. Fleck eds. , H. Haacke & S. Lindberg trans. pp.  273 281. D sseldorf Richter. External links Museums Managers of Consciousness http artcode.org andyland old 1999 Text Haack.MngrsConsc.html Category Consciousness Category Industry ... more details
Infobox Journal title Anthropology of Consciousness cover editor Hillary S. Webb discipline consciousness language English language English abbreviation AOC publisher American Anthropological Association AAA country United States of America U.S.A frequency semiannual history 1990 present openaccess license impact impact year website http www.sacaaa.org anthropologyofconsciousness.asp link1 link1 name link2 link2 name RSS atom JSTOR OCLC 60640215 LCCN CODEN ISSN 1053 4202 eISSN Anthropology of Consciousness is the primary publication of the Society for the Anthropology of Consciousness , published by American Anthropological Association AAA since 1990. The current editor, Hillary S. Webb, began the position in the summer of 2009. ref cite journal journal Anthropology News month April year 2007 volume 48 issue 4 page 57 title Society for the Anthropology of Consciousness author Lawrence B McBride ref Prior to joining the AAA, the Society was called Association for the Anthropological Study of Consciousness AASC , and published the AASC Newsletter and AASC Quarterly ref cite journal title From the editor author journal Anthropology of Consciousness date March June 1990 volume 1 issue 1 2 page 3 doi 10.1525 ac.1990.1.1 2.3.1 ref and earlier newsletters were also published. ref cite journal url http www.sacaaa.org history.asp title Boulders in the Stream author Stephan A. Schwartz journal Journal of the Society for the Anthropology of Consciousness date March June 2001 ref Access The journal is available online through AnthroSource , and abstracted in the following journals or CD ROM services. Abstracts in Anthropology , from Volume 6, 1995. Anthropological Literature , from Volume 6, 1995. Exceptional Human Experience , from Volume 1, 1990 selective . Sociological Abstracts , from Volume 6, 1995. References reflist External links http sacaaa.org Society for the Anthropology of Consciousness http www.sacaaa.org anthropologyofconsciousness.asp Anthropology of Consciousness ... more details
The term participating consciousness was introduced by cultural historian Morris Berman in The Reenchantment of the World 1981 ref Morris Berman, The Reenchantment of the World, Cornell University Press, 1981 ref ref Morris Berman, Excerpts from The Reenchantment of the World, ref expanding on Owen Barfield s concept of original participation, ref Owen Barfield, Saving the Appearances a study in idolatry, 1957 http en.wikipedia.org wiki Saving the Appearances A Study in Idolatry ref to describe an ancient mode of human thinking that does not separate the perceiver from the world he or she perceives. Berman says that this original world view has been replaced during the past 400 years with the modern paradigm called Ren Descartes Cartesian , Isaac Newton Newtonian , or scientific, which depends on an isolated observer, proposing that we can understand the world only by distancing ourselves ... he associated with the rise of modernity, capitalism, and scientific consciousness. Berman traces the history of this disenchantment. He argues that the modern consciousness is destructive to both the human ... Participating consciousness involves merger, or identification, with one s surroundings, and bespeaks ... great coherent expression of participating consciousness in the West. The concept of participating consciousness has been used and further developed by philosophers and analytical psychologists ... of Consciousness Interdisciplinary Studies in American Philosophy, Fordham University Press, 1991 ref ref Sharon Warner, An epistemology of participating consciousness Overcoming the epistemological ... ref Some compare participating consciousness to the thinking of non Western indigenous peoples. Others ... to Participating Consciousness, Social Work 39 1994 362 370 ref ref Joshua Landy and Michael ..., 2009 ref ref Willeford, W. 1984 , Magic and Participating Consciousness. Journal of Analytical Psychology ... Consciousness studies ... more details