> Because we don't don't have any memory of what it was like to be in these states.
I want to add an anecdote from about 5 years ago when I fainted: there is a tiny moment as I was regaining consciousness that I had an experience that is unlike anything I’d ever experienced before (and words really fail to describe it) there was no sense of time, or even presence- it was like pure observation. It wasn’t the blackness nothingness that I think is associated with being unconscious, instead it was the opposite- it felt like hundreds of images, sounds and thoughts all layered on top of each other- it was very ‘noisy’. That might sound stressful, but I don’t remember feeling anything at all.
It was only when some of that noise faded away that I experienced a sense of ‘self’ again and a moment later I formed the idea where am I? And then I opened my eyes and everything was back to typical conscious experience (although feeling a little disoriented).
> Because we don't don't have any memory of what it was like to be in these states.
I want to add an anecdote from about 5 years ago when I fainted: there is a tiny moment as I was regaining consciousness that I had an experience that is unlike anything I’d ever experienced before (and words really fail to describe it) there was no sense of time, or even presence- it was like pure observation. It wasn’t the blackness nothingness that I think is associated with being unconscious, instead it was the opposite- it felt like hundreds of images, sounds and thoughts all layered on top of each other- it was very ‘noisy’. That might sound stressful, but I don’t remember feeling anything at all.
It was only when some of that noise faded away that I experienced a sense of ‘self’ again and a moment later I formed the idea where am I? And then I opened my eyes and everything was back to typical conscious experience (although feeling a little disoriented).