Introduction
This consciousness theory is written with a hope of further understanding and solve / resolve the nature of either distorted perception of reality (e.g. psychosis) and / or some people having coma or hibernation status (to further understand and hopefully wake them up).
Consciousness
The consciousness may consists of following minimum or sufficient amount numbers of sub-processes:
Consciousness:
Awareness
- Analogy: Knowing.
Why: Coherence. I wrote that but dunno exactly why.
Example: A flower.
- Analogy: Forming a relation / relationship.
Why: In order for awareness to occur so.
Example: A flower planted in a bowl filled with dirt and water.
- Analogy: Understanding / translating a meaning.
Why: What else way to actualize learning, sense-making, understanding, then lead to knowledge circular to (awareness).
Example: Between flower and dirt, water, and bowl as boundary.
- Analogy: Has / Have.
Why: Ownership / governance.
Example: Flower taken a hold of dirt - setting up root and whatnot.
- Analogy: Limiting.
Why: To prevent from too much or too much less of [insert something any word], leading to limitation.
Example: Bowl as boundary.
- Analogy: Weighting between two or more things in equal proportion. Equal.
Why: Same amount between each other (value numbers or meanings or both).
Example: Flower not overgrown or undergrown, just “perfect / imperfect” or wabi-sabi as it is.
- Analogy: Changing.
Why: What else to make a difference apart from sameness?
Example: Flower growing up to as it is apart from its initial status.
- Analogy: balanced changing.
Why: Sync at normal rate, stability reason. May refer to awareness as circular (i.e. coherence reason).
Example: Flower “stable” as it is.
[Note 2: It is not certain whether if there are more sub-processes or not at this time of authoring.]
Consciousness’s “Processing”
Each or group of consciousness(es) [unfolding and folding or unpacking and packing], to deal with a situation (freewill, fate, or both [asd – adaptive semi-determinism]).
May be fractal or in some other ways of getting from A to B (A position / meaning to B position / meaning.) or vice versa.
Sabi-Wabi
Sabi-wabi (a Japanese concept), both perfection and imperfection.