It's an "emergent property", a property that's only expressed in a system due to interactions of the parts of the system, rather than a property of the parts themselves.
Think of a point in 3-D space. It has only one property, location. But with two points, you can have 'distance'. With 3, you can have 'area'. With four, 'volume'. All of those properties (distance, area, volume) do not exist in the points themselves, but rather as a property of their interactions as a system.
On a more neurobiological level, we can at the least localize it as far the a cerebrum. Destruction of the cerebrum leaves a person nothing but a vegetable, even if everything else is intact, while destruction or replacement of other body parts either has no effect or is simply instantly fatal.
signed, Sheryl
It came from the Dutch word docke.
From the Japanese word 'taikun' meaning great lord or prince
marco polo
The origin of a word indicates the language the word originally came from, or the languages certain parts (such as prefixes and suffixes) come from.
The word passed into English from Old French 'essaier'. From an earlier time this may have been borrowed from Latin 'exigere'
bob felt his consciousness slipping away
consciousness Alertness
When the car crashed, he hit his head and lost consciousness. After ten years, the disaster had mostly faded from the consciousness of the community.
Parts of word consciousness include word recognition, understanding word meanings, word association, and word recall. It involves an individual's awareness and knowledge of the words they encounter and their ability to manipulate and use words effectively in language.
conscientia
in other word
After the accident, the patient lost consciousness.Regaining consciousness, the woman could not recall what happened.In the 1960s, LSD users believed the drug raised their consciousness.
By using it as a noun, like 'The man's guilty consciousness made him confess to the crime of stealing the cookies.'
The word 'consciousness' is a common, abstract, uncountable noun; a word for the state of being awake, and able to think; the knowledge or understanding that something exists; the beliefs, thoughts, feelings of a person or a group of people. Example sentence:Public health includes increasing the public consciousness of health issues.
The noun 'consciousness' is a common, uncountable, abstract noun; a word for the state of being awake and able to understand what is happening around you; concern for some social or political cause; a word for a concept; a word for a thing.
Sorry, but in English, there is no root form. It comes from the Latin word " conscius ", meaning knowing inwardly. The Latin word had a prefix " con " meaning together, and a root " scire " meaning to know.
The collective aspects of intellect and consciousness.