This study will discuss the intentional business, which refers to incompetent of understanding from different event, action, and or object while performing task. These may vary from the environment of my work which helping the customers over the phone to troubleshoot with their television. In this scenario it may come up that if you are talking with a customer while you are doing a different task you may notice that there are different procedure that you are following and your customer might be upset because you are not paying attention from his or her problem. From the video, I was surprised of the output of the video because I just focus to that specific action of the character that has been instructed which I didn't expect because there is follow up question that has been prepared after that video. This will define about the phenomenal consciousness that simply defines an action, emotion, sensation and feeling of our bodies and responses at the center.
While access consciousness is define as reasoning, information from our minds that are susceptible for verbal report and behavior. The difference between these two types of consciousness are phenomenal consciousness is only portraying the movement of an object and it doesn't have a specific explanation and you are just aware what happens in the environment. While the access consciousness helps you understand the action that has been taken and simple explains your thought of awareness. Those two can connect with each other. However, that access consciousness can live by itself. Phenomenal consciousness shows from the clip is only the movement of the characters without any explanation. It is surprising that this phenomenal and access consciousness can be combined so that in every time that you spend for your life you will know the importance of the things that you are not aware of. The brain also uses these two systems so that we can easily determine what the things around us and we are aware to those simple things that we did not recognize. Therefore, those two consciousness’s’ can answer our questions and easily define the importance of it.
Works Cited
Koch, Christof, and Naotsugu Tsuchiya. "Attention and consciousness: two distinct brain processes." TRENDS in Cognitive Sciences 11.1 (2006): n. pag. Print.