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A Phenomenon Known As Consciousness
राजीव
Is Consciousness an emergent property of Mind or a fundamental property of Existence **Abstract-** Consciousness remains one of the most debated subjects, with no universally agreed definition or framework across disciplines such as philosophy, science, metaphysics, and life sciences. Even among different schools of thought within a single discipline, consciousness is sometimes defined in strikingly different ways. Its uniquely subjective nature makes it both fascinating and difficult to study objectively, and it continues to remain both a profound mystery and a central topic of inquiry. · Scientifically speaking, consciousness is generally viewed as an elusive phenomenon, often described as an emergent property of neural activity. · Philosophically speaking, it is considered the fundamental subjective state through which all other phenomena thoughts, sensations, perceptions, and even the very idea of phenomena itself are experienced and known. · Metaphysically speaking, consciousness is not confined to living beings but is regarded as a fundamental aspect of existence itself, from which everything, including matter, ultimately arises. · Vedantically speaking, consciousness is regarded as the fundamental, all-pervasive essence of reality. It is considered eternal, undivided, self-luminous, and the ultimate source of awareness, existence, and experience. Vedanta explores consciousness through four states: waking, dreaming, deep sleep, and the fourth transcendental state known as Turiya, which represents pure awareness. In other words, it is a state of pure being, free from all identifications and mental constructs. This article attempts to place all four within one coherent frame by extending the inquiry beyond the usual limits of each framework, introducing a new perspective without claiming to replace or redefine the existing frameworks discussed here. The article leaves it to the reader to further examine these ideas and draw their own conclusions. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- **Layers of Consciousness Within Four Domains of Inquiry** Below are some usual and everyday terminologies used with each domain and are often mixed together casually, however many of these legitimately belong to multiple domains depending on context. Scientific Domain-(Life sciences, neuroscience, cognitive science, empirical psychology) These terms are primarily used in relation to biological function, neural processing, cognition, behaviour, and measurable responsiveness. Sentience Perception Attention Wakefulness Cognition Recognition Intelligence Responsiveness Reactivity Integration Processing Registration Sensitivity Philosophical Domain-(Epistemology, philosophy of mind, inquiry into knowing and experience) These terms relate to knowing, interpretation, awareness, selfhood, and the structure of subjective experiences. Consciousness Awareness Comprehension Understanding Interpretation Discernment Reasoning Self-awareness Reflection Introspection Observation Subjectivity Metaphysical Domain-(Ontology, nature of existence, fundamental reality, beingness) These terms move beyond cognitive processes into questions of existence, being, and the underlying nature of reality. Presence Being Knowingness Presence-awareness Vedantic Domain-(Advaita Vedanta, non-duality, transcendental consciousness) These terms are closely aligned with contemplative and non-dual traditions, especially Vedantic inquiry into pure consciousness. Pure awareness Witness-consciousness Non-dual awareness Witnessing Mindfulness (in contemplative usage) These categorizations are only a classification of consciousness-related terminologies according to their dominant mode of inquiry or ontological orientation but are not absolute and can be reassigned as per readers preference. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- **Clarification of Key Terms** Within the inquiry into consciousness, certain terms are often used interchangeably despite referring to different dimensions of experience and cognition. Consciousness may be understood as the overall field or possibility within which experiences arise and are known. Awareness refers more directly to immediate presence or the capacity for direct experiential recognition. Cognition relates to processing, interpretation, recognition, and conceptual organization of experience. Intellect functions as the reflective and discriminative faculty capable of analysis, observation, reasoning, and self-examination. Mind, in a broader psychological sense, includes memory, emotion, imagination, narrative continuity, and conditioned patterns of response. These distinctions are not absolute, yet maintaining some conceptual clarity helps prevent unnecessary confusion as inquiry moves into subtler dimensions of experience. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ** **Consciousness a multidimensional phenomenon** Consciousness may be understood as a multidimensional phenomenon. The evolution of life forms and intellect does not itself explain the reality of consciousness. Intellect, with its reflective and self-observing capacity, instead function as an instrument through which expansion of consciousness sems to appear. The opposite claim, that consciousness is the sole fundamental reality from which all life, matter, and intelligence has emerged through perhaps contraction, involution or some other process within a singular infinite field of consciousness, cannot be claimed as absolute truth either. Such conclusions remain deeply subjective and therefore incapable of universal agreement. Even if expanded states of awareness allow access to profound insights including intuitions concerning causality, existence, or even the formation of the universe itself, there may still exist dimensions beyond consciousness, beyond cognition, and beyond the reach of both science and philosophy as they currently operate. It is however conceivable that as awareness expands, the operation of will, intention, and desire may no longer appear entirely constrained by the rigid structures through which the physical world is ordinarily experienced. Expanded awareness may alter the way causality, perception, and participation in existence are encountered, perhaps allowing access to dimensions of experience that remain inaccessible to ordinary conditioned cognition. Yet such possibilities remain profoundly subjective and difficult to verify universally. An experience may be profoundly real, transformative, and internally coherent at the experiential level without necessarily establishing universal ontological truth. Expanded states of awareness, subtle perceptions, or deeply transformative experiences may significantly alter ones understanding of existence. , yet the intensity or depth of an experience alone cannot conclusively determine the ultimate structure of reality. The danger begins when deeply personal experiences are converted into absolute metaphysical conclusions applicable to all existence. Maintaining this distinction allows inquiry to remain open without invalidating the experiential significance of such states. Human inquiry repeatedly encounters this boundary: the further awareness expands, the more it reveals limitations of every framework attempting to define existence conclusively the. From this perspective, the expansion of awareness may indeed allow human beings to transcend ordinary cycles of psychological conditioning, identity, and perhaps even many subtle metaphysical patterns of experience. However, it remains philosophically premature to claim a complete and final escape from the infinite movement of appearances and transformations. Existence may not culminate in any permanent conceptual resolution; rather, it may remain an endless unfolding in which every realization, however vast, still stands within a mystery greater than itself. Human intelligence has demonstrated not objectively in the scientific sense, but subjectively through direct experience that the expansion of individual awareness appears to deepen and widen the subtlety of experiences. Each subtle state offering higher or deeper ground allowing unadulterated cognition of earlier states which in turn offers sort of complete control over mental and physical functions or changes in that state Interestingly, this expansion does not begin through accumulation, but through negation. The intellect gradually starts questioning and shedding its identifications with beliefs, memories, emotions, social conditioning, psychological narratives, and even the very image it has constructed of itself. As these layers loosen, awareness seems to become less fragmented and less confined by habitual patterns of thought. In this process, intellect undergoes a profound transformation: it no longer functions merely as conditioned cognition reacting mechanically to experience, but becomes increasingly reflective, self-transparent, and capable of observing its own movement without complete identification. Perhaps at a certain depth, intellect reaches a threshold and crosses it, where it can no longer be called the same conditioned intellect and It does not disappear either, but its mode of operation changes fundamentally. It shifts from being an instrument of psychological & mental continuity and self-preservation into a sort of self-illuminating medium through which it now perceives any event more directly as they arise rather than primarily through conceptual mediation. An experience may be profoundly real, transformative, and internally coherent at the experiential level without necessarily establishing universal ontological truth. Expanded states of awareness, subtle perceptions, or deeply transformative experiences may significantly alter ones understanding of existence, yet the intensity or depth of an experience alone cannot conclusively determine the ultimate structure of reality. The danger begins when deeply personal experiences are converted into absolute metaphysical conclusions applicable to all existence. Maintaining this distinction allows inquiry to remain open without invalidating the experiential significance of such states. So, consciousness here appears a progressive reduction of conditioning, conceptual overlay, and psychological distortion in cognition itself, that is much more precise, and importantly, it avoids turning awareness into a mystical self-knowing entity in a metaphysical sense. Yet even this transformation may not represent a final state or ultimate truth, because the moment any experience is declared absolute, thought once again solidifies living inquiry into conceptual certainty. This does not establish consciousness as an emergent property of mind, brain, or intellect. Rather, it points toward the possibility that the conditioned mind functions as a limiting and interpretive structure through which consciousness is expressed. As awareness expands and cognition becomes increasingly transparent, the assumption that consciousness is merely a byproduct of mind may itself begin to lose explanatory necessity. But at same time it also does not proves that Consciousness is the basis from which the mind body structure or mind or intellect has emerged. The progressive reduction of psychological conditioning does not by itself establish whether consciousness is an emergent property of mind or whether mind itself arises within consciousness. It only suggests that the structure and conditioning of cognition significantly influence the manner in which experience and awareness are perceived and interpreted. Perhaps the idea that consciousness is the fundamental basis of existence emerges when awareness expands beyond ordinary conditioning and cognition becomes increasingly transparent, allowing access to subtler layers of experience, memory, and impressions. In such states, there may arise perceptions of the emergence, continuity, and dissolution of events including the very mind-body structure through which the inquiry itself began sometimes giving rise to experiences that appear cosmological or primordial in nature, reflecting access to extraordinarily subtle layers of cognition and impressions. From the standpoint of human awareness, this can create the impression that one has reached an ultimate limit beyond which all prior states appear merely contracted or involuted expressions of the same continuum. In that sense, it may not be entirely incorrect to say that consciousness pervades everything within the experiential domain of existence, nor entirely incorrect to say that, for an individual human being as an event within existence, consciousness appears as an emergent property of mind. Yet at a certain depth, both positions begin to dissolve from the very conceptual ground out of which they initially arose, and perhaps what remains is pure awareness itself. It then becomes a matter of inquiry whether such a pure and unadulterated state still retains the possibility of form, differentiation, or choice. Intellect attempts to reach a final explanation concerning consciousness, existence, and reality. Yet deeper the inquiry proceeds, every framework appears to reveal its own boundaries. Scientific, philosophical, metaphysical, and contemplative systems may each illuminate different dimensions of the same mystery without exhausting it completely. Perhaps inquiry itself is not separate from the movement it attempts to understand. The search for the ultimate ground of consciousness may itself arise from consciousness, cognition, or existence attempting to understand its own nature through the instrument of human awareness. In this sense, the mystery may not be something that can be conclusively resolved, but something through which existence continuously unfolds in ever newer forms of understanding. **At certain depths of inquiry, opposing positions that once appeared mutually exclusive may begin losing their rigid boundaries. Consciousness may appear both emergent and fundamental depending upon the frame through which it is observed.** Similarly, distinctions between observer and observed, mind and awareness, subject and object, may become increasingly unstable. Yet this dissolution does not necessarily culminate in a final answer. It may instead reveal that what intellect attempts to identify as reality actually exceeds every conceptual framework attempting to contain it completely. **What remains then may not be certainty, but a more direct participation in the living movement of inquiry itself.**
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