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Understanding Consciousness

Experiencing reality using senses and cognitive abilities.
By Michael Alan Prestwood

Author and Natural Philosopher

Sun 8 Mar 2026
Published 1 week ago.
Updated 1 week ago.
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Understanding Consciousness

By Michael Alan Prestwood

Consciousness is not a magical on-off switch unique to humans, but the layered experiencing of life through senses, memory, emotion, anticipation, and thought—an evolutionary story that stretches from the earliest living minds to modern self-awareness.

The Understanding Consciousness series explores one of the biggest questions humans can ask:

what does it mean to experience reality? This series takes a science-first but philosophically open look at consciousness, tracing it from its likely evolutionary roots in early life to the rich inner world of modern humans. Along the way, it examines the history of ideas about the soul and self, the ancient layers of mind that still shape us, the suffering and wonder that come with human awareness, and the frameworks we use to talk about identity, perception, memory, emotion, and worldview. The goal is not to reduce consciousness to one thin definition, but to explore it as a layered, living process—one that connects biology, philosophy, and the human experience itself.

1 of 5
Philosophy
Article
Consciousness: From the Soul to the Abyss
Consciousness
The human-only view tends to tie consciousness to the soul, still a good way to separate biological and religious chats. From the biological viewpoint, it is the experiencing of reality through senses and cognition. This allows us to discuss the types or levels of consciousness including how tigers, humans, and potential aliean life experience reality.
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History
Article
Echoes of the Self: Exploring Consciousness Across the Ages
Consciousness
Consciousness, at its most basic, is the act of cognition engaging with sensory input. When an organism can take in information and process it, consciousness is present. Self-awareness, reflection, emotion, and identity are later developments—important, but not required for consciousness itself.
3 of 5
Philosophy
Article
Existential Toolkit: Evolution’s Consciousness Misstep
Existential Toolkit
Riding the Wild Horse: Life’s journey is an unpredictable, often absurd ride, but if you embrace your freedom and choose an authentic path, whether that path is through managing anxiety, forging your own meaning, or a rebellion against despair, you can find strength and purpose amidst the chaos.
4 of 5
Philosophy
Article
Mindscape Framework
Consciousness
We do not merely react to reality — we model it. Many of those modeling tools began as ancient heuristics designed for survival. Over time, those models stabilize into worldview, and worldview fuses with identity. When we recognize that identity rests atop layered cognitive architecture, we gain humility.
5 of 6
Philosophy
March to Consciousness: The Soul Timeline
Consciousness
Consciousness wasn’t planned. Evolution added one trait at a time: sensation, memory, pattern-recognition, prediction. Each was added randomly, each useful. Consciousness started when cognition met sensory input. Allowing animals to experience itself experiencing the world. That intersection is consciousness: not magic, not sudden, but the natural accumulation of small changes.
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