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Unconscious mind : UnconsciousThe unconscious mind is the aspect (or alleged aspect) of the mind of which we are not directly conscious (in the sense of phenomenal consciousness.) The unconscious mind should not be confused with unconsciousness.The idea originated in antiquity, and its more modern history is detailed in Henri F Ellenberger's Discovery of the Unconscious. The term was popularized by Sigmund Freud. In one of Freud's systematizations, the mind is divided into the Conscious or Ego and two types of Unconscious: the Id or instincts[?] and the Superego. Freud used the idea of the unconscious in order to explain certain kinds of neurotic behavior. (See psychoanalysis.) Although Freud's theories of the mind are generally regarded as unscientific by contemporary psychologists, there is agreement among many, perhaps most, psychologists and cognitive scientists that much of mental functioning takes place in a part of the mind inaccessible to the eye of consciousness. Carl Jung developed the concept further. He divided the unconscious into two parts: the personal unconscious and the collective unconscious. The first of these corresponds to Freud's idea of the subconscious, though unlike his mentor, Jung believed that the personal unconscious contained a valuable counter-balance to the conscious mind, as well as childish urges. As for the collective unconscious, also called "the archetypes", this is the common store of mental building blocks that makes up the psyche of all humans. Evidence for its existence is the universality of certain symbols that appear in the mythologies of nearly all peoples.
Why contemporary cognitive science posits an unconsciousThe unconscious is arguably not the most intuitive idea, so why bother with it? What's the evidence? What might the unconscious explain?
I think it was Jung who observed that the conscious is like a cork floating on the ocean of the unconscious.
Is the unconscious altogether inaccessible, or is it just hard to access?As some of the above examples indicate, material is constantly moving from the conscious mind to the unconscious and vice versa. The conscious mind only holds a small amount of information at any given time. In many cases information - especially easily accessible memories - can be called into awareness at will.
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convulsions, and had a sort of delirium. Daturi was the means of
own authority sent them back and went for a doctor, who pronounced me
letting, which restored my calm. Six hours later he pronounced me
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his views suited mine. I used this half hour in writing to Jarbe,
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hear more of this negro in the course of two years.
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exhausted my strength, and left me in a state of coma which lasted
me to life again, but it was only by dint of the most careful
after my arrival in France.
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flight from London, indignant with Jarbe, and angry at being obliged
Daturi, not knowing where to turn or where to go, or whether I had
mentioned to Brussels instead of London.
When I got to Dunkirk, the day after I left Paris, the first person I
readers may remember, the niece of Tiretta's mistress, with whom I
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