CHAPTER
9
States of Consciousness
IN THIS CHAPTER
Summary:While you are reading this book you may find yourself daydreaming
as irrelevant thoughts surface, images of other situations come into view, and
you create inner, private realities unconnected to this topic. Daydreams
provide stimulation when your interest is flagging and lets you experience
positive emotions. Although we hope not, you may even doze off. If so, you
are experiencing different states of consciousness. In the late 1800s, early
structuralists like Wilhelm Wundt, followed by Edward Titchener, examined
consciousness in order to learn about the structure of the mind, and function-
alists like William James considered consciousness as essential for adapting to
the environment. During the first half of the 1900s, behaviorists discounted
and ignored consciousness. By the 1950s, cognitive psychologists returned to
the examination of consciousness, especially the phenomenon of attention.
Attentionis a state of focused awareness. What you pay attention to is what
you process into perceptions, thoughts and experiences.
Consciousnessis your awareness of the outside world and yourself, including your own
mental processes, thoughts, feelings, and perceptions. Your consciousness is selective,
subjective and unique to you, always changing, and central to your sense of self.
This chapter examines variations in consciousness, some which you commonly
experience and others which you don’t.
Key Ideas
✪Levels of consciousness
✪Sleep and Dreaming
✪Sleep disorders
✪Hypnosis
✪Meditation
✪Psychoactive drugs—Depressants, Narcotics, Stimulants, Hallucinogens
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KEY IDEA
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