Baars (1997) argued that access to consciousness is controlled by
attentional mechanisms. Consider, for example, sentences such as, “We look
in order to see” or “We listen in order to hear”. According to Baars (1997, p.
364), “The distinction is between selecting an experience and being conscious
of the selected event. In everyday language, the first word of each pair
[“look”; “listen”] involves attention; the second word [“see”; “hear”] involves
consciousness.” In other words, attention resembles choosing a television
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