Awareness

We explain what consciousness is and the differences with consciousness. In addition, social, moral, environmental and class consciousness.

Consciousness is the ability to perceive and judge one's own existence.

What is consciousness?

The word conscience (and, in some cases, conscience) It has different meanings, all related to the human mind and with lucidity, that is, with the ability to perceive our environment. It is not a simple term to define, and disciplines as different as philosophy and psychology have dealt with it.

In their origin, both consciousness and conscience come from the Latin word consciousfruit of the prefix with- (“union”, “together”) and the verb scire (“discern” or “mentally separate one thing from another”), and which came from the adjective conscius (“confident”).

Around the 1st century BC. C. this word was used to refer to shared knowledge, general knowledge and, therefore, the self-knowledge of human beings, that is, knowledge that had to do with their existence, their thoughts and their actions.

In that same century, however, the term was used for the first time in the sense of “remorse,” by the Latin poet Horace (65-8 BC), to translate the Greek term syneidesis (roughly equivalent to “imaginative capacity”). From then on it began to be used with the meaning of “having something on one's conscience.”

As we can see, the word has had a history of changes and nuances that have thickened its meaning. Nowadays we attribute almost all those meanings from Latin to it, especially those that are related to self-knowledge (as in “being aware“) and the moral judgment of one's own actions (as in “having a clean awareness“).

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Therefore, when we talk about consciousness we are referring to:

  • The ability to know our environment and locate ourselves in it, that is, lucidity.
  • The ability to reflect on reality and take a stand against it.
  • The ability to judge our actions from a moral perspective (good or bad).

The same meanings apply when we classify someone as conscious or unconscious, and for much more specific uses of the word, such as those we will see later.

Finally, we must say that consciousness, understood as the ability to perceive, understand and judge one's own existence, is a capacity, as far as we know, exclusive to human beings.

Furthermore, it constitutes, paradoxically, one of the greatest unsolved mysteries of our existence: where does consciousness reside? what exactly is it? How is it generated? These are questions that many religions have tried to answer with the notion of “soul” or “spirit,” and that still do not have a definitive scientific answer.

Consciousness or awareness?

According to the Pan-Hispanic Dictionary of Doubts of the Royal Spanish Academy, conscience and conscience are interchangeable in most contexts in which we generally refer to the perception or knowledge of reality, although it is common to opt for the simplest spelling, the one that does not have “s” between consonants.

But the term conscience is preferred when referring to morality that is, to the evaluation of one's own or others' actions in terms of good and evil.

Thus, we will say that “So-and-so regained consciousness” (that is, he woke up from a faint), but that later “his conscience judged him” (that is, he felt remorse).

However, In the case of derived adjectives, conscious or unconscious is always used that is, the formula with “s” between consonants is used. The forms “conscious” or “unconscious” are not correct.

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Social awareness

When we use the term “social awareness”, we are referring to the ability or the interest that an individual has regarding the living conditions of the other members of his community.

So a socially conscious person, like this, is one who recognizes himself as part of a human collective, understands and accepts the responsibilities that this implies.

On the other hand, people who live without worrying about their community, nor getting involved in it, nor feeling in any way responsible for what takes place in it, are individuals devoid of social consciousness.

Moral conscience

The term “moral conscience” may be redundant in certain contexts, since the exercise of conscience is usually an exercise of morality, that is, of discernment between what is considered good, appropriate, appropriate, and what is considered bad inappropriate or out of place.

Morality, however, changes according to the cultural framework where it is located that is, from one culture to another, or from one era to another in the same culture. Therefore, moral conscience is also changing, and in general has to do with public opinion, and with the notion of ethics: the responsibility towards others that we have when we exercise a position, a job or an authority.

Thus, moral conscience is the ability to judge one's own actions according to the cultural framework to which we belong. It is precisely to this type of conscience that we appeal when we perceive that our actions could be harmful or offensive to another, or when they imply values ​​contrary to those we would like to see reign in the world, if it were only up to us.

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Environmental awareness

Similarly, we speak of “environmental awareness” or “ecological awareness” to refer to the degree of lucidity and knowledge of an individual regarding the environmental impact of their actions their way of living and their daily habits.

A person with environmental awareness is expected to live taking into consideration pollution and the degrees of environmental damage that can be prevented on a daily basis, through small actions or habits: recycle and reuse, save energy, not consume certain brands of products. , etc.

class consciousness

The term “class consciousness” comes from Marxism, and is used to refer to the degree of knowledge that a person has regarding his or her own location within socioeconomic relationships and power that exists in society.

More simply put, a class-conscious person knows what socioeconomic stratum he or she belongs to, and therefore knows which sectors oppose the development and improvement of the living conditions of their social class and which sectors, on the contrary, are favorable to their cause.

This concept makes sense within the logic of “class struggle” proposed by Marxist philosophy as an explanation of historical change: social classes would compete with each other for control of the means of production, as some try to exploit others. to generate wealth (“The exploitation of man by man”).

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References

  • “Consciousness” on Wikipedia.
  • “Consciousness (psychology)” on Wikipedia.
  • “Consciousness” on Wikipedia.
  • “Conscience” in the Pan-Hispanic Dictionary of Doubts of the Royal Spanish Academy.
  • “What is consciousness” in Psicoadapta, Psychology Center.
  • “Consciousness” in Filosofía.org.
  • “Moral conscience” on ABC Color (Paraguay).