concept

states of consciousness

Also known as: mental states of consciousness, consciousness states

Facts (15)

Sources
Classification Schemes of Altered States of Consciousness - ORBi orbi.uliege.be ORBi 5 facts
referenceCharles T. Tart authored the book 'States of Consciousness', published by iUniverse in 1983.
referenceP. Tassi and A. Muzet published a review titled 'Defining the states of consciousness' in Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews in 2001.
referenceRalph Metzner contributed a chapter titled 'Psychedelic, Psychoactive, and Addictive Drugs and States of Consciousness' to the 2005 book 'Mind-altering drugs: The science of subjective experience', published by Oxford University Press.
referenceCharles T. Tart published an article titled 'States of consciousness and state-specific sciences' in Science in 1972, discussing the scientific study of consciousness states.
referenceRoland Fischer published 'A cartography of cognitive and non-cognitive states of consciousness' in Anthropology of Consciousness in 1992.
Self-Consciousness - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Jul 13, 2017 4 facts
claimP.F. Strawson argues that Cartesian dualism is ruled out because ascribing states of consciousness to others requires the ability to identify others, which is impossible with pure subjects of experience or Cartesian egos.
claimThe 'no-ownership view' posits that individuals do not truly self-ascribe states of consciousness, particularly not by using 'I' as the subject.
claimP.F. Strawson offers an account of persons that distances the notion from self-consciousness by defining a person as an entity to which both predicates ascribing states of consciousness and predicates ascribing corporeal characteristics are equally applicable.
claimP.F. Strawson argues that an individual can only self-ascribe states of consciousness if they are also able to ascribe those states to others.
Theories and Methods of Consciousness biomedres.us Paul C Mocombe · Biomedical Journal of Scientific & Technical Research Jan 29, 2024 1 fact
claimStates of consciousness are defined as variable levels of awareness.
Panpsychism - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Jul 18, 2017 1 fact
claimPhysicalism posits that consciousness states are physical states, and therefore they are part of the causally closed physical system.
Unknown source 1 fact
claimThe in silico perturbation protocol used in the study 'A Virtual Clinical Trial of Psychedelics to Treat Patients With...' functions by distinguishing between different states of consciousness.
Quantum Approaches to Consciousness plato.stanford.edu Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Nov 30, 2004 1 fact
referenceThe framework for studying reduction, supervenience, or emergence relations between material brain states and mental states of consciousness is discussed by Kim (1998) and Stephan (1999).
[PDF] A virtual clinical trial of psychedelics to treat patients with disorders ... biorxiv.org bioRxiv Aug 19, 2024 1 fact
claimThe research protocol described in the paper aims to characterize the brain dynamics of states of consciousness.
Medicinal plants meet modern biodiversity science - OUCI ouci.dntb.gov.ua Charles C. Davis, Patrick Choisy · Elsevier BV 1 fact
claimPeak and mystical experiences are states of consciousness existing on a spectrum of intensity and duration, characterized by profound joy, ecstasy, awe, noetic quality, decreased self-salience, and heightened interconnectedness.