DWQA Questions › Tag: physical matterFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesPhysical matter, like rocks and bodies of water, have consciousness sufficient to perceive their surroundings and have thoughts. Is it because they are aggregates of energy that they have perceptions and can think, or are atoms, subatomic particles and all forms of energy, such as light, electricity, and magnetism possessed of consciousness with the same potentials? Are these energies alive? What is Creator’s perspective about defining whether something is alive?ClosedNicola asked 2 months ago • Non-Local Consciousness83 views0 answers0 votesA client asks: “Is the distinction between the energy of consciousness and the energy needed to sustain a living physical body one of integration, where the consciousness of a human is more integrated and the “atoms of consciousness” make bigger and more complex “consciousness structures” capable of independent thought and autonomy, than say a sheep? And a sheep has more of this than a mosquito and a mosquito more of that than an ameba, and an ameba more than an atom, and an atom more than an electron? Whereas the consciousness of a big oak tree, may represent a tremendously large amount of consciousness, that is less tightly integrated then perhaps even that of a single mosquito?”ClosedKaren Gore asked 7 years ago • Metaphysics582 views0 answers0 votes