"Unconscious experience" refers to any thoughts, feelings, or sensations that a person has, but they are not aware of them at the time. It is like having an experience without consciously realizing or remembering it
Full definition
In such a situation, the bias in favor of understanding
unconscious experience as a function of the brain loses whatever metaphysical justification it may once have had.
In addition to the vast complexity
of unconscious experience, I suggested, we can analyze conscious experience into significantly organized and receptive levels.
Psychology is referred to as the science of behaviour and mind, embracing all aspects of conscious and
unconscious experiences as well as thoughts.
They represent the bridge from European surrealism, how that modernist ideal of
depicting unconscious experience becomes the DNA that makes American post-war abstract expressionism possible.
«Baziotes, Gottlieb and Stamos... [t] hey represent the bridge from European surrealism, how that modernist ideal of depicting
unconscious experience becomes the DNA that makes American post-war abstract expressionism possible.»
Indeed, everything in the past which can in principle be recalled in the future under hypnosis, for example, must be fully present in
unconscious experience at every moment.
Not knowing anything about out - of - body experiences, Whinnery called these episodes dreamlets, kept detailed records of their contents, and began examining the literature on
anomalous unconscious experiences.
The Freudians and Jungians are good at convincing people that there is a distinction between conscious and
unconscious experience, but they are of precious little help when it comes to discussing the metaphysical ground of that difference (the former growing reductionist and the latter mystical).
The unconscious experience of each contributed to the unconscious experience of others in such a way that the group or tribe constituted a unit of psychic life quite inconceivable for axial man.
The prejudice in favor of a physiological explanation of experience, and especially of
unconscious experience, has long been very great.
All of its offspring, from C. G. Jung to the ego psychologists, tend to recognize the reality of
unconscious experience, even if it does not always play the key in treatment that it does for more classical analysts.
We can grasp the massiveness and complexity of what is present in
our unconscious experience in relation to the relative simplicity and superficiality of our consciousness by considering what we, in fact, are experiencing in each occasion in comparison with that which we can bring into focus with some conscious clarity.
But since consciousness presupposes experience and not experience consciousness, we must reckon with the possibility that all of them are, in fact, prehended at all times — hence, with an immense richness of
unconscious experience.
The discussion of personal identity has raised the question of
unconscious experience.
The psychic processes, which were the content of conscious and
unconscious experience, became for them also the objects of awareness, and these were, to an astonishing degree, thereby subjected to conscious control.
When Whitehead spoke of the soul, he focused attention upon consciousness, but his philosophy also points up the very large role of
unconscious experience.
In it the author describes in great detail methods that have over the years enabled him to recover from
the unconscious experiences that, until recently, very few were aware of at all: the prenatal experiences of....
Negatively, it meant that whatever aspect of conscious or
unconscious experience could be conceptualized or objectified was distinguished as other than, alien from, and, finally, even indifferent to the self.
But I'm not sure exactly what this means, and I have no good idea of the sense in which
the unconscious experience is unified with what I experience consciously.
From a whisper to a growl, we hear a pause for breath followed by an explosion of
unconscious experiences, limits of the body punctuating the exchange.
Surrealism Movement in art and literature between the two World Wars that tried to fuse actuality with dream and
unconscious experience, using automatism among other techniques; hence Surreal, Surrealist.
We believe that children have a right to
an unconscious experience of their childhood, by which we mean that they should be free to enjoy healthy attachment relationships, have the emotional and psychological space to be spontaneous and creative, and to explore the world around them.