I wonder what this can imply about the nature of consciousness or psychology? — Wallows
We don't dream that way (as far as I know) because "other people who have minds of their own" is such a basic, never-violated rule of reality. We don't observe, meet, or interact with our own imagined characters in the real world. — Bitter Crank
Our dreams should have characters that act as if they had minds of their own even though they do not, since that is the kind of world we live in. Could we have a dream where we were aware (in the dream) that all the characters were merely projections of our dreaming mind, and themselves knew it? — Bitter Crank
Dreams occur in a state of awareness with little to no sensorimotor constraints and diminished frontal cortex activation. Neuro-imaging data which contrasts lucid dreamers with non-lucid dreamers while sleeping is suggestive of higher frontal cortex activation in lucid dreamers. Lucid dreamers feel agency in dreams, non-lucid dreamers do not. — fdrake
Something to take away here is that the neural architecture which supports our sense of self and cognitive agency is actually doing a lot of stuff, and volitional control is but one of many distinct (but overlapping and correlated) functions it exhibits. — fdrake
What do you think the stupid dream (above) means? — Bitter Crank
It's just illogical that we treat these dream entities as having a mind of their own in my opinion. — Wallows
They are "real" in regards to our inner world — Wallows
I don't "believe" in dream interpretation -- like using a chart which lists what images "mean". Like "a thing is a phallic symbol if it's longer than it's wide"***. That's just malarky. A better method of interpretation is to teach the dreamer to "free associate" to the images. In my dream, for instance, what images, or ideas, or feelings do the 'files" or "Marian Hall" bring to mind. "Files" bring to mind feelings of frustration and unease. "Marian Hall" brings to mind a feeling of security, belonging. (I'm not, never was, Catholic.). — Bitter Crank
How is it possible for these dream characters that populate a dream world to have, seemingly, an intent of their own? Why would they? I mean, given that a dream world is practically tantamount to living in a solipsistic world, you would assume that you are the only person with a 'mind' within a dream. Yet, even in dreams where I am aware that I am dreaming (lucid dreams), I still find it hard to shake off the preprogrammed belief that the friend I meet, the father or mother I talk with, or the siblings I interact with in a dream have a mind of their own... — Wallows
One interesting question is that if dream entities do indeed have an intent of their own, then what is their goal or 'desire' to get out of interactions with them? What do you think? — Wallows
Another interesting question is what they get up to while you're awake and unconscious of them. — unenlightened
I suspect that in most dreaming states, that the mind has more resources available to analyze or be able to determine differing thoughts and stuff. — Wallows
One interesting question is that if dream entities do indeed have an intent of their own, then what is their goal or 'desire' to get out of interactions with them? What do you think? — Wallows
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