"The most intractable question in modern neuroscience and philosophy of the mind is often phrased
"What is consciousness?"
The problem has been summed up nicely by philosopher David Chalmers as what he calls the Hard Problem of consciousness:
How is it that we are subjects, and not just objects?
Chalmers contrasts this hard question with what he calls the Easy Problem of consciousness:
What are the neurobiological substrates underlying such things as wakefulness, alertness, attention, arousal, etc. Chalmers doesn't mean of course that the neurobiology of arousal is easy. He merely means to show that even if we can understand arousal from a neurobiological standpoint, we haven't yet solved the hard problem: the problem of subjective experience. Why am I an I, and not an it?" EN&V
The problem has been summed up nicely by philosopher David Chalmers as what he calls the Hard Problem of consciousness:
How is it that we are subjects, and not just objects?
Chalmers contrasts this hard question with what he calls the Easy Problem of consciousness:
What are the neurobiological substrates underlying such things as wakefulness, alertness, attention, arousal, etc. Chalmers doesn't mean of course that the neurobiology of arousal is easy. He merely means to show that even if we can understand arousal from a neurobiological standpoint, we haven't yet solved the hard problem: the problem of subjective experience. Why am I an I, and not an it?" EN&V
FORMULA for Consciousness:
BODY + BREATH OF LIFE (Spirit) = SOUL (your consciousness)
...and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life;
and man became a living soul.
Genesis 2:7