How do you decide which particular mental states are called psychic experiences and which are not? For example, do you call hypnagogic hallucinations 'psychic'? If not, why not? If you do, what additional information does the use of the word 'psychic' impart to the description? Linda
I gather there is a consensus of pathology as a function of narcolepsy regarding hypnagogic hallucination.
Clearly, people can take problems to and bring problems from sleep.
It also seems some can bring solutions from sleep.
'Psychic' is not a metaphor for 'good' or 'balance' or 'harmony' and the like.
Allow me here a
final comment so as not to hijack the thread.
I hope you find it interesting.
A friend studied and pondered the true meaning of a word-concept of human nature and meaning for about twenty years.
He one night had a very clear dream. He does not describe it as 'lucid' although he is familiar with the literature.
(... The Dream :
I am at the edge of a forest.
A person of ambiguous sexuality is walking away into the darkness of the undergrowth.
A voice says: "That person was one of the resistance during the war."
I am next wearing a swimming costume and lying face down on a beach fronting an ocean. The Sun is warm and pleasant and everything is calm.
A woman wearing a swimming costume is kneeling in the sand about twenty feet to my left.
As I notice her she says: "I see you have come out of it at last.", as though I had been in a long sleep.
I ask: "Who are you?"
She replies: "My name is Martha."
I ask: "Where are you from?"
She replies: "I have been here all the time."
We are at ease together.
...)
My friend explained to me that the name of the woman is an anagram of the word-concept he had been concentrating on for so long a time, and now totally comprehends.