Sentience is being capable of feeling, consciousness or having some form of mind.[1] Eighteenth-century philosophers used the concept to distinguish the ability to think (reason) from the ability to feel (sentience).
Intelligence and sentience
In simple English, to be sentient means displaying and/or having the ability to:
- Feel
- Perceive
- Desire
- possibly Will, though this goes beyond some definitions.
Philosophy and sentience
In the philosophy of consciousness, sentience can refer to the ability of any thing to have subjective perceptual experiences, or as some philosophers refer to them, "qualia".[2]
Animal rights and sentience
Thinking about sentience is important when studying animal rights. This is because feeling is needed in order to suffer. The basis of animal rights is that some animals have emotions, can feel pain and also feel happy and well.[3]
Reference
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| Theories | | Philosophy of mind |
- Functionalism
- Idealism
- Materialism
- Monism
- Panpsychism
- Physicalism
- Solipsism
- Anomalous monism
- Computationalism
- Double-aspect theory
- Eliminative materialism
- Emergentism
- Epiphenomenalism
- Interactionism
- Mind–body dualism
- Neutral monism
- New mysterianism
- Nondualism
- Parallelism
- Property dualism
- Reflexive monism
- Revisionary materialism
- Type physicalism (reductive materialism, identity theory)
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| Science |
- Attention schema theory
- Dynamic core hypothesis
- Damasio's theory of consciousness
- Electromagnetic theories of consciousness
- Global workspace theory
- Higher-order theories of consciousness
- Holonomic brain theory
- Integrated information theory
- Lamme's recurrent feedback hypothesis
- Multiple drafts model
- Orchestrated objective reduction
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| Topics |
- Agnosia
- Animal consciousness
- Artificial consciousness
- Awareness
- Binding problem
- Binocular rivalry
- Blindsight
- Cartesian theater
- Consciousness after death
- Disorders of consciousness
- Divided consciousness
- Dual consciousness (split-brain)
- Explanatory gap
- Flash suppression
- Hard problem of consciousness
- Heterophenomenology
- Higher consciousness
- Introspection illusion
- Knowledge argument
- Locked-in syndrome
- Mind–body problem
- Minimally conscious state
- Neural correlates of consciousness
- Neurophenomenology
- Phenomenology
- Primary consciousness
- Problem of other minds
- Quantum mind
- Reentry
- Sakshi
- Secondary consciousness
- Sentiocentrism
- Sociology of human consciousness
- Stream of consciousness
- Subjective character of experience
- Subjectivity and objectivity
- Visual masking
- Von Neumann–Wigner interpretation
- Yogachara
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People (or figures) | | Philosophy | |
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| Psychology | |
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| Neuroscience | |
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| Others | |
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| Works |
- A Universe of Consciousness
- Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness
- Consciousness and Cognition
- Consciousness Explained
- Cosmic Consciousness
- How the Self Controls Its Brain
- Journal of Consciousness Studies
- Online Consciousness Conference
- Psyche
- The Astonishing Hypothesis
- The Conscious Mind
- The Emperor's New Mind
- The Science of Consciousness
- Understanding Consciousness
- "What Is It Like to Be a Bat?"
- Wider than the Sky
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