Sentences with phrase «unconscious mind at»

When we speak of our «gut reactions» or «I just didn't feel right about that situation», this is our cognitive, unconscious mind at work.

Not exact matches

(15) Depth semantics is «the product of perceptual structures which operate in the [author's] mind at an unconscious level rather than at a consciously artistic level.»
C. S. Lewis identified this sort of discourse in The Abolition of Man where he explained how the grammar book of «Gaius» and «Titius» propagandizes rather than educates, having wormed into the inner recesses of the child's mind: «It is not a theory they put into his mind, but an assumption, which ten years hence, its origin forgotten and its presence unconscious, will condition him to take one side in a controversy which he has never recognized as a controversy at all.»
Of Charles Gore it is recorded that almost the last words heard from his lips were «transcendent glory: «58 perhaps the theologian's unconscious mind turned to familiar topics, or perhaps the lover of God looked at last upon the face of Him in whom he had so long hoped and believed.
He remains active in research at Columbia University, and his extraordinary productivity and creativity are exemplified by his weighty 2012 book, The Age of Insight: The Quest To Understand the Unconscious in Art, Mind, and Brain from Vienna 1900 to the Present.
Whether this anxiety is triggered by the fear of death in a major life threatening illness or whether it is a pattern of worrying about the future or dwelling in past traumatic events, it gets more intense at night as the unconscious mind needs to take over from the conscious mind for sleep to happen.
As you mentioned, we are creatures of habit, our unconscious mind takes over on a lot of everyday tasks and habits that we create (brushing our teeth, the way that we walk, drive, make a sandwich, look at ourselves in the mirror, all patterns) Lots of emotions and feelings are tied into our thinking and acting as well.
Eric R. Kandel, MD, University Professor and Kavli Professor at Columbia University, Director of the Kavli Institute for Brain Science, Co-director of the Mortimer B. Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute, and Senior Investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, presents on his 2012 book The Age of Insight: The Quest to Understand the Unconscious in Art, Mind, and Brain, From Vienna 1900 to the Present.
Organized by the University Art Gallery at Colorado State University, Drawing Inward reveals how Oelze plumbed the depths of the conscious and unconscious mind through visual experimentation.
The book's title, The Dream Colony: A Life in Art (2017), is borrowed from a phrase Hopps encountered while doing a stint at a think tank and describes the region of the unconscious mind in which artists dwell.
In her major retrospective at Hayward Gallery back in 2011, visitors had the opportunity to navigate extensively through her cosmos and witness her investigation in the sphere of the unconscious and conscious mind.
The stipulation that no consent is obtained where the complainant is incapable of consenting (s. 273.1 (2)(b)-RRB- suggested that «Parliament was concerned that sexual acts might be perpetrated on persons who do not have the mental capacity to give meaningful consent», including persons who were unconscious, again indicating that consent was intended to mean «the conscious consent of an operating mind» (at para. 36, citing Esau).
Because consent is an ongoing state of mind, it ends when the complainant becomes unconscious and incapable of consenting (or of revoking consent)(at paras. 27 - 29, citing McLachlin J. in Esau and s. 273.1 (2)(e)-RRB-.
It's as if the unconscious says that «since I'm not important in his mind then at least I'll be important right now by winning this argument.»
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