The word 'conscious' entered English in the late sixteenth century from Latin 'cōnscius,' meaning 'knowing with another, privy to, aware of.' The Latin adjective combines 'con-' (together, with) and the root of 'scīre' (to know), from the Proto-Indo-European root *skei- (to cut, to split). The connection between cutting and knowing reflects an ancient conceptual metaphor: to know is to distinguish, to separate one thing from another, to cut the world into recognizable categories.
The original Latin sense of 'cōnscius' was interpersonal rather than introspective: to be 'conscius' was to know something together with someone else — typically to be privy to a secret or an accomplice to a crime. 'Sibi conscius' (conscious to oneself) meant having guilty knowledge, being aware of one's own wrongdoing. The Roman historian Sallust and the poet Virgil both used the word in this sense. The shift from 'sharing knowledge with another' to 'being aware of one's own mental states
This introspective turn was facilitated by the related noun 'cōnscientia' (from which English gets 'conscience' and 'consciousness'). In Cicero and Seneca, 'cōnscientia' already carried the sense of moral self-awareness — the inner witness to one's own actions. The Christian tradition intensified this introspective dimension: 'conscience' became the voice of God within the soul, the faculty by which a person judges the moral quality of their own actions. When 'conscious' entered English, it inherited both the
The noun 'consciousness' — now one of the most debated terms in philosophy and neuroscience — was coined in English in the seventeenth century. John Locke's 'Essay Concerning Human Understanding' (1690) gave 'consciousness' its modern philosophical centrality, defining personal identity in terms of continuity of consciousness rather than continuity of substance. Locke's formulation — that a person is the same person insofar as they are conscious of their past thoughts and actions — remains foundational to philosophical discussions of identity.
The 'hard problem of consciousness' — why and how physical processes in the brain give rise to subjective experience — was named by the philosopher David Chalmers in 1995, though the puzzle itself is ancient. The word 'conscious' thus sits at the intersection of philosophy, neuroscience, psychology, and artificial intelligence, generating more debate in the twenty-first century than perhaps any other English word.
The prefix 'un-' produces 'unconscious,' which acquired its Freudian sense in the late nineteenth century. Freud's concept of the 'Unbewusstes' (the unconscious) — the repository of repressed desires, memories, and drives that influence behavior without conscious awareness — was translated into English as 'the unconscious,' fundamentally changing how the word's family was understood. 'Subconscious' (below consciousness) emerged around the same time as an alternative term, though psychologists generally prefer 'unconscious.'
In everyday English, 'conscious' has developed several practical senses beyond the philosophical. 'Self-conscious' means painfully aware of oneself (the Latin guilty-knowledge sense returning in modified form). 'Conscious' as a combining form means 'aware of and caring about': 'health-conscious,' 'fashion-conscious,' 'environmentally conscious.' The phrase 'a conscious decision' means a deliberate, intentional choice — the opposite of an automatic or reflexive one
The PIE root *skei- produced a remarkably diverse family beyond the Latin branch. In Greek, it generated 'schizein' (to split), giving English 'schism,' 'schizophrenia,' and 'schedule.' In Germanic, it produced 'shed' (to separate), 'shin' (the split bone), and 'shit' (to separate from the body). The family thus spans the range from the crudely physical to the profoundly metaphysical — all united