Online Google Dictionary

unconsciousness 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Noun
/ˌənˈkänCHəsnəs/,
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unconsciousnesses, plural;
  1. The state of being unconscious
    • - someone gave me a crack across the head and I slipped into unconsciousness
  2. The state of being uninformed or unaware
    • - part of her beauty was her unconsciousness of it

  1. a state lacking normal awareness of the self or environment
  2. unconscious mind: that part of the mind wherein psychic activity takes place of which the person is unaware
  3. (unconscious) not conscious; lacking awareness and the capacity for sensory perception as if asleep or dead; "lay unconscious on the floor"
  4. unconscious(p): (followed by `of') not knowing or perceiving; "happily unconscious of the new calamity at home"- Charles Dickens
  5. Unconsciousness, more appropriately referred to as loss of consciousness or lack of consciousness, is a dramatic alteration of mental state that involves complete or near-complete lack of responsiveness to people and other environmental stimuli. ...
  6. The state of lacking consciousness, of being unconscious; ignorance or innocence; the state of being uninformed or unaware
  7. (Unconscious) The repressed psychological material held within the subconscious mind and any other material held within the subconscious of which we are unaware.
  8. (unconscious) 1: the part of the psychic apparatus that does not ordinarily enter the individual's awareness and that is manifested especially by slips of the tongue or dissociated acts or in dreams; 2: not knowing or perceiving : not aware   Rush 7X06
  9. (Unconscious) Senseless; comatose.
  10. (Unconscious (Noun)) The part of myself that doesn’t exist and that I don’t want pointed out to me.
  11. (Unconscious) "Trance Mediums" who must go into a state of deep relaxation, wherein the conscious mind of the channel will actually "go away somewhere" while the entity who is speaking has control of the voice and/or body.
  12. (Unconscious) 5 minute duration – You have been knocked out.  You must fall to the ground and lay face-up with your palm on your forehead to indicate that you are Unconscious (as opposed to in your Death Count). ...
  13. (Unconscious) Any condition wherein the incarnated human Soul is identified with a portion of its instrument (i.e., mind, desire-feeling nature and body) rather than as its identity as the Self.
  14. (Unconscious) Asleep and unaware of self or the environment.
  15. (Unconscious) C. G. Jung: "Everything of which I know, but of which I am not at the moment thinking; everything of which I was once conscious but have now forgotten; everything perceived by my senses, but not noted by my conscious mind; everything which, involuntarily and without paying ...
  16. (Unconscious) It "is rooted in unavowable and unavowed wishes or desires which have undergone repression such that their content remains foreign to, forbidden by the consciousness, which spends considerable energy in barring knowledge of and/or memory of such desire from itself. ...
  17. (Unconscious) That part of the psyche of which the content is only rarely subject to awareness. It is a repository for data that have never been conscious [primary repression] or that may have become conscious briefly and later repressed [secondary repression] (adapted from Psychiatric).
  18. (Unconscious) The assumption that much of mental life, including thought, feelings, and motivation, take place outside conscious awareness. ...
  19. (Unconscious) a Chinese philosopher; wise saying: "It's better to have loved and lost then never to have seen »Lost in Space« at all." [922]
  20. (Unconscious) experiences which become too difficult to confront and so become hidden from the surface workings of life
  21. (Unconscious) that which is repressed out of awareness. Its core is instinct-representations consisting of wish-impulses. Also, see Id.
  22. (Unconscious) thoughts, memories, impulses, desires, and feelings which we are not aware of but influence our emotions and behavior in some subtle way.
  23. (unconscious) A term which has two possible interpretations: (a) as synonymous with a totally diminished awareness of the external world, as in stuporor coma, or (b) as a psychological term for those forces and drives which are not normally available to the person's awareness due to the forces ...
  24. (unconscious) Freud argues that aspects of our conscious life which are socially/culturally taboo or forbidden, or which are traumatic, become repressed. The Unconscious is thus constructed out of repressed instincts, desires, fears and anxieties. ...
  25. (unconscious) Mental activity of which the person engaging in it is not aware; hence a presumed source of unknown internal influences over the conduct of human agent. ...