Interesting Ian
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- Feb 9, 2004
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I frequently, in the eight minutes between me hitting "snooze" and the alarm going off again, have dreams with an apparent elapsed time of several hours.
I don't believe you.
I frequently, in the eight minutes between me hitting "snooze" and the alarm going off again, have dreams with an apparent elapsed time of several hours.
It may be highly weird to you. To others (and to me) it's common knowldge that they don't. (hey cool, I can use the common knowldge-argument too! It's not that hard actually, just write common knowldge.)It's probably research into lucid dreams which indicates that dreams occur in real time. You know, they hook a person up to various measuring apparatus which can register when a person enters REM, and the dreaming person can communicate with the outside world by pre-arranged directed movement of his eyes (the only part of the body which isn't paralysed).
And it's highly weird to think dreams don't occur in real time.
Ahem.. plus an e somewhere in there...common knowldge)
It may be that while lucid dreaming, having more of a 'waking state' of conscioussness, dreams DO occur in real time, while normally, they don't.
I don't believe you.
All my dreams certainly occur in real time.
How do you know? Do you continuously check the clock in real life and compare it to the one in your dream world?
It's probably research into lucid dreams which indicates that dreams occur in real time. You know, they hook a person up to various measuring apparatus which can register when a person enters REM, and the dreaming person can communicate with the outside world by pre-arranged directed movement of his eyes (the only part of the body which isn't paralysed).
And it's highly weird to think dreams don't occur in real time.
The events taking place in the dream appear to occupy the same subjective sense of time elapsed as in the waking state.
I'll weigh in on the side of common knowledge that dreams do not occur in real time. I often have dreams that seem to take place over several hours when I've only been asleep a short time. I've spoken to others about this, and they have concurred. As someone else said, in the time between snooze alarms (seven minutes on my clock), I can have an entire dream that spans a lot longer than seven minutes.It may be highly weird to you. To others (and to me) it's common knowldge that they don't. (hey cool, I can use the common knowldge-argument too! It's not that hard actually, just write common knowldge.)
It may be that while lucid dreaming, having more of a 'waking state' of conscioussness, dreams DO occur in real time, while normally, they don't.
I think the key here is the term "subjective." It appears to the dreamer that the dream scenario is taking place in "normal" time. You have the subjective sense that (for example) half an hour has passed in your dream, but in real time only ten minutes have passed.The events taking place in the dream appear to occupy the same subjective sense of time elapsed as in the waking state.
Wrong. I have had many dreams that seemed to last for hours, but which in fact lasted a few minutes at most. I know because I looked at the clock.Dream time passes at the same rate as real time.
Meaning things don't seem to happen in fast-forward or molasses in January? One can hardly call dream perceptions reliable, can one? If so, I've got exciting news -- I can fly. No, really, I perceived it while dreaming.The events taking place in the dream appear to occupy the same subjective sense of time elapsed as in the waking state.
I think that lucid dreams would be more likely than other dreams to occur in real time. If the research looks mostly at lucid dreams (for very good reason, I might add--it gives the opportunity for a clear signal from the dreamer to the researcher), this would tend to pile up "real time" evidence, perhaps artificially.It's probably research into lucid dreams which indicates that dreams occur in real time. [snip]
And it's highly weird to think dreams don't occur in real time.
I would say it does not.Peoples' claims here are wholly contrary to my experiences. But let me accept what you guys claim. What I want to know is how this gives evidence against consciousness surviving our brains?
I would say it does not.
What it does do, though, is put the burden of proof back on the "survival" claim. If these NDE's could be dreams before or after the "death" incident, seeming longer than that time could seemingly explain, we are back to square one, with no definitive proof of survival.
This is not direct evidence against, but merely discounts the phenomenon as evidence for.