What is the difference between attention and awareness?

Awareness is the ultimate, unconditioned foundation of reality. As such, awareness is not a function of a physical brain or a byproduct of biological processes. Rather, awareness is the self-illuminating reality in which all phenomena arise, exist, and dissolve. This foundational source is inherently dynamic and ever-present, serving as that in which all experience is rendered, of which it is made, and by which it is known. Because the fundamental nature of awareness is dimensionless and limitless, there is no spatial distance to cross. Foundational reality does not move toward or away from specific objects, because all apparent objects are rendered directly in awareness as expressions of awareness itself.

Attention represents a localized contraction of this infinite field. While awareness encompasses everything simultaneously without preference, attention narrows the field to single out specific forms, thoughts, or sensory inputs.

The primary distinction between the two concepts lies in their scope and movement. Awareness acts as the context, while attention operates as a tool for engaging with content within that context. When a localized mind focuses on a particular sound, attention isolates that specific detail. However, the capacity to recognize that a sound is being heard relies entirely on the foundational presence of awareness. Attention narrows the focal point but possesses no inherent capacity to know. Awareness alone is the singular subject experiencing the localized mind.