Hey there, |
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A thought came to me today of how we could look at out conscious and subconscious minds that differs from most anything that I have read. Which means, the idea is probably all ready out there, but I just haven't run into it. Regardless, I wanted to post my thoughts to see what others within the LD community felt. |
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Hey there, |
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I appreciate your response, though I'm looking at access as being more direct and persistent. I'm not looking to dredge up a specific point that causes a malady and confronting it. Even in psychoanalytical therapies, they are really just digging down to the problem, not waking the subconscious up. Bringing a memory to the surface in no way means that you've woken your subconscious. You've just accessed a specific piece of information. To use dreaming as an analogy, psychoanalytical therapy would be like bringing waking consciousness into the dream, but only remembering that you live with your abusive father on Fuller Street but nothing else. I want the whole enchilada, or something close, in the same manner that lucid dreaming brings the vast majority of waking consciousness into the dream state all at the same time. I hope this makes my original statement clearer. |
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Last edited by madmagus; 10-07-2015 at 09:00 PM.
Hey there, |
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Last edited by Redrivertears; 10-07-2015 at 09:35 PM.
Thanks for the above. When I say consciousness, it includes the subconscious and conscious minds. The subconscious is a subset of consciousness as is the conscious mind. You can mean consciousness as in i'm conscious and awake, but that merely points to a state of mind, a state of awareness, as in I am awake and conscious verses asleep and unconscious. Certainly you know that the term consciousness has more than one definition depending on context. |
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Sorry, I have to concur with redrivertears on this one. The idea of the subconscious as some sort of other entity doesn't work for me. I see consciousness as a spectrum, with fully conscious at one end and unconscious at the other. The difference is how much the higher brain function is active (frontal cortex). I can see that somehow getting your conscious mind to be more aware of the unconscious could be of some help, since this is a bit like mindfulness I think? |
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^^That. |
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Last edited by Sageous; 10-08-2015 at 05:55 PM.
thanks for the response Sageous. As I've stated in the past, many times terminology gets in the way of itself when trying to communicate an idea. If it helps conversation to use the term unconscious versus subconscious, then I have no issue with it. I am certainly not wedded to the term. It is simply one that has been used throughout my life in all previous discussions prior to this forum. But I am not one to hold fast to terminology that confuses those I wish to communicate with, despite believing that everyone knew what I was talking about, since the terminology was corrected by you. It's as if the idea behind my post was ignored in order to disapprove of the single term. Hopefully future discussions will not get caught up by simple semantic disapproval and will instead deal with the actual ideas brought forward. It would have been simplest to simply say directly that my use of the term subconscious was not part of DVs lexicon and that I should use unconscious to better communicate. But I certainly appreciate your input Sageous as a means of clarifying what the issue at hand actually was. Looking forward to clearer communication and potentially interesting discussions. |
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Goldenspark, You make two distinct statements here. You say that consciousness is a spectrum, which I actually agree with. But that doesn't mean that it is not partitioned, otherwise the conscious mind and the unconscious mind would be fully communicating already in a very active, obvious manner. That certainly is not the case, or we would be able to access dream consciousness at will, and all of our memories would be readily accessible (essentially we would all have eidetic memory function). But that is obviously not the case. Physical body regulation is conducted by some aspect of consciousness. It has always been prescribed as a function of the unconscious mind, since we do not consciously regulate such functions. So even that last is not within conscious awareness, though certainly could be considered awake, as it is functioning efficiently. I obviously should have been more precise in defining which part of the unconscious that i was identifying as needing to be awoken. I guess I didn't see the need, as I assumed everyone would understand that i obviously was not talking about that aspect of the unconscious (or whatever the aspect) that controls physical regulatory needs. |
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Sageous, I actually, upon reflection, have to retract part of my above statement to you. I shouldn't acquiesce on a point that I disagree with just for the sake of congeniality. The terms subconscious and unconscious are not improperly used synonyms. They are not synonyms at all. They refer to different aspects of consciousness. And, for the record, I don't care if 'some' psychoanalysts strictly use the term unconscious due to their educational dogma. |
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^^ First, I was not correcting you on word usage. I'm pretty sure I wrote in my post that I wouldn't have cared if you were using the word "subconscious" instead of "unconscious;" I gave up waging that small usage battle a long time ago. Instead, I was responding to your description of the term, as partially stated here: |
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Last edited by Sageous; 10-09-2015 at 05:09 PM.
I am coming to see our Lucid dreaming as quite magical with its ability to help uncover and show us our sub/unconscious ways and beliefs - it's sometimes terrifying whats thrown up in ones face and other times the most amazing experience ever! All within us |
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Last edited by Patience108; 10-09-2015 at 07:40 PM. Reason: Spelling
Thank you both for taking the time to respond. |
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i agree, Sageous, that the conversation was immediately derailed, and the point of the OP is lost. There is only one point that I would still like to make and that regards opinions. Anyone, you or a psychologist or anyone else, who makes a statement about non-physical reality, i.e. the mind, consciousness can only have opinions, theories. For something to be a fact, it must incorporate objectivity. And there are no objective facts about consciousness. There are only theories, opinions. It doesn't matter how many decades psychologists have studied the subject, they have no facts because we don't have the technology to record factual information about consciousness, thus anything they say is there opinion based on their research. You can lay a person on a table and record data while they are in sleep states, for instance, but you are only gather information on the physical body, not the mind. The mind/consciousness is non-corporeal. Any interpretation of mental activity that is not physically generated, such as the experience itself, can not be recorded and can not be called a fact. Your preferred terminology is just another example of an opinion. You can't call it fact, because someone just made up the word and the definition as a means to describe something they theorize about. Which is why not everyone agrees with the particular terms nor the theory behind them. Nothing describing consciousness can be called fact until we gain a far greater skill set that will allow us to record hard data. Thanks for your perspective. |
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^^ Believe it or not, I tend to agree with everything you just wrote, Madmagus. |
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Last edited by Sageous; 10-10-2015 at 06:07 AM.
I appreciate your response. And on this forum, if the consensus is to use unconscious, then I will do so for convenience of communication. But as i stated some where earlier in the thread, this is the only forum that I have ever posted on where the term confused someone. But I can live with that. I certainly don't require anyone to conform to my preferences. It doesn't mean that I have come to agree with your opinion, but that has never stopped me from having useful conversations. Hopefully it won't here either. I hope that any future differences of opinion can be kept to ideas presented rather than be drug through the semantics pit. Though I actually do think information was posted that was potentially helpful to readers on the site. So not a total loss. |
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For one last time, Madmagus, and respectfully: I was not talking about using the term "subconscious" instead of the term "unconscious;" I was talking about your descriptions of the terms. |
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Last edited by Sageous; 10-10-2015 at 06:44 PM.
From Oxford Dictionaries: |
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Thank you for your comment Redrivertears. Perhaps on a different thread we'll get into an interesting conversation about this topic or another. |
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You know, I've tried very hard to remain friendly and respectful with you, Madmagus, regardless of your completely incorrect judgments and baseless accusations about me, but I think I've had enough. Since I never once used the word "fact" or referred to a fact, yet you still insist that that is all I'm talking about, and since you seem more focused on attacking me than in developing your own thread, I'm beginning to sense a bit of trolling on your part. |
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Last edited by Sageous; 10-11-2015 at 08:14 AM.
You're right. If someone disagrees with you and doesn't come around, they must be trolling. You need to stop drinking your own cool aid. It's very very bad for you. My communication ends as well. Peace Out |
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I've been away from this for a while, and now sad to see this topic had descended into some acrimony! |
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No. If someone lies about what the other is saying (in spite of the other's actual words being right over his post for all to see, which is sort of amusing), and then someone makes baseless personal attacks (like the one above) instead of rational arguments, then I do indeed get the feeling that this may be a person who would rather troll than discuss a subject intelligently. And yes, repeatedly insisting that I was stating things as objective fact even though I obviously never did is to me a lie. |
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Last edited by Sageous; 10-12-2015 at 12:08 AM.
You must not be able to hear your own voice, sageous. Your responses have been quite derogatory, simply because I won't change my position that you keeping hammering me with. Or you are not capable of evaluating your own comments. Either way it doesn't matter. Oh, and thanks for keeping your word about keeping your distance. Something appears too good to be true it usually is. |
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