Consciousness

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Revision as of 12:27, 25 December 2023 by Fractalguy (talk | contribs)

What Is Consciousness

Consciousness arises from a feedback loop between our senses and our memories that generates images, dialog, and feelings in a never-ending internal feed. It can be thought of as our memories stimulating our senses to produce echoes of the original stimuli that imprinted them. We literally hear ourselves think.

Our consciousness uses our memories and training to process new data from our external senses and create output to our motor neurons that determine how we interact with the universe. This can be idle processing like daydreaming, or active processing like weighing pros and cons to make an important decision. In both cases the feedback loop is used to simulate new responses to stimuli and evaluate the expected outcome.

The states of consciousness we experience depend on the interaction of these three steps in the stimulus/response cycle.

Input (senses, stimulus) -> Processing (thoughts, consciousness) -> Output (muscles, response).

While this is a simplified model, it can be very helpful for those without extensive education in psychology to understand the relationship between the physical brain and our subjective experiences.

Desirable States of Consciousness

When considering the feedback loop that gives rise to conscious thought, it is helpful to examine the states of consciousness that circumvent the feedback loop and why we find them desirable.

Mindfulness

When we are mindful and living in the moment, we are able to turn off the feedback loop and simply experience the new sights, sounds, and sensations that are coming to us externally. It's all input without processing or output.

The practice of mindfulness also refers to intentionality and presence when performing any activity, which focuses the thought process on the task at hand ahead of time to maximize effectiveness and enjoyment in the moment. In this case processing is happening in advance so it doesn't need to be done in real time. This also helps in achieving flow.

Mindfulness is desirable because it allows us to maximize our natural emotional responses to the present situation without being distracted by irrelevant or intrusive thoughts.

Flow

Similar to mindfulness, flow states are when we bypass the feedback loop and connect stimulus and response directly through well-worn neural pathways created by repetitive training. It's direct input to output without processing.

When performing simple flow tasks like driving and exercising, it is possible to engage the Input and Output via the flow state, while simultaneously Processing completely unrelated thoughts.

Flow is desirable because it puts our hard-earned training to work, and when you find that groove it feels really good. There are obvious evolutionary advantages to being really good at stuff. And if you've already developed optimal neural pathways there is no advantage to considering alternatives in the moment, which is all you get when you start thinking about what you are doing.

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Deep Thought & Dreaming

Shutting off the Input and Output to concentrate exclusively on the feedback loop of conscious thought enables you to test alternative neural pathways in a safe environment before you connect them to an Output that could result in consequences.

Or you can simply let the random connections between neurons take your train of thought wherever it wants to go--also known as daydreaming. This stimulates creative thought and forms novel neural pathways that can help us see things in new ways or solve problems we're not even focused on. Dreaming at night serves a similar purpose, one so important that our brains make it mandatory.

Generative AI, Newsfeeds and Modern Consciousness

Generative AI operates very similar to the human stream of consciousness. While AI works by simply consuming huge amounts of data and predicting the most likely word to come next based on a prompt, human language is also a stream of words generated by a probability model trained by every experience that person has ever had.

Due to the similarities our minds have with AI, there are likewise similar shortcomings. Spend too much time on the wrong parts of the Internet and you cannot help but grow more racist, sexist, and hateful, as we saw over and over with early chatbots trained on social media. Therefore it is as essential that we curate the information that we feed our minds with as it is to apply critical thinking to that information.

Since we lack the time and resources to critically evaluate all of the information we take in, and modern media platforms offer an infinite stream of information both questionable and reputable sources, the importance of actively avoiding exposure to misinformation, especially when confirmation bias is involved.

Our stream of consciousness can also be compared to a newsfeed, and the more we use newsfeeds to shape our minds the more similar they become. Just like our newsfeed, our consciousness is a stream of memories, images, thoughts of loved ones, political ideologies, religious dogmas, gossip, music, jokes, work, hobbies and sex. The thoughts we have on these subjects will always be a reflection the information we have given our minds through experience and media.

Free Will

See free will for a discussion of whether or not we have free will and the implications for our ethical and legal frameworks.