Buchzusammenfassung
Annaka Harris is a writer whose work has been featured in the New York Times. She also works as a consultant for other science writers, and she was a collaborator in creating the Mindful Games Activity Cards. She is also the author of the children’s book I Wonder and has two children of her own with the podcast host and neuroscientist Sam Harris.
Consciousness, a cornerstone of existence, remains an enigma shaped by subjective experiences, as philosopher Thomas Nagel proposed in 1974. While humans intuitively recognize their own consciousness, studies of plants and split-brain patients challenge assumptions about its exclusivity and nature. Plants, through behaviors like nutrient sharing and memory-like responses, hint at a rudimentary awareness, while split-brain research reveals the possibility of multiple consciousnesses within one individual. These findings, alongside theories like panpsychism, which suggests consciousness could permeate all matter, push us to question the boundaries of awareness. As we explore the illusions of self and the brain’s automatic processes, consciousness emerges as a dynamic, adaptable phenomenon—one that may ultimately be rooted in the very fabric of existence. The next chapter delves deeper into these complexities, examining how consciousness interacts with perception, memory, and identity.
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