 Originally Posted by Shift
I completely disagree. The word 'lucid' simply means 'aware', and lucidity means 'awareness'. But, in terms of lucid dreaming, the definition is that you are aware that you are dreaming. Yes, you can be 'lucid' or mentally aware in general in dreams, but unless you realize that it IS a dream, you are not lucid dreaming by definition. That is what the term means.
What is it that we are experiencing under that condition of being 'aware we are dreaming'? What is it that gives it the quality, what separates it from being just a non-lucid dream about lucid dreaming? The freedom of choice (which is what attracts the majority of people to lucid dreaming) comes from the space between you and the dream, that you are independent and detached, that is it's quality, and that quality of freedom can be achieved without the pseudo-knowledge that you are dreaming (and I say pseudo-knowledge because it can't really be known, just assumed). The detachment can be initiated by that pseudo-knowledge, but only indirectly. It's not a certain way to attain that clarity, many times people have crossed the idea that they are dreaming while in a dream and have missed it. Awareness of the 'pseudo-knowledge that you are dreaming' does not necessarily give the quality. You can still call it a lucid by definition, but that's not the point of being lucid for most, just to say that they have had a lucid dream. The fascination comes from the freedom of choice and control.
As an example, to be detached in waking life, you do not have to think that you are dreaming, you do not have to have that underlying feeling to be detached and to have that freedom to choose what thoughts/projections to follow (which is what I think dreams are -- just thought/projections).
 Originally Posted by Shift
Of course there are different philosophical standpoints and etc. (ie what is real life, why isn't that just a dream, etc etc etc), but that depends on one's personal viewpoints. Awareness during waking life is distinct and separate from being lucid in your dreams (except that it can help you recognize you're dreaming). Awareness of the fact that you are dreaming is what makes you 'lucid' in a dream regardless of whatever else you're aware of- lucid of the fact that you're dreaming. I think you are talking about two different kinds of mental awareness during dreaming- being generally mentally aware, and being aware of the fact that you are dreaming- and using the term lucid for both. Though the terminology is accurate this is very confusing, because simply being lucid(aware mentally) in a dream doesn't make you 'lucid dreaming'. To be lucid dreaming, you must be aware that you are currently IN a dream.
Awareness in waking life carries over to dream, just as something like reality checking does, as well as desires etc. The difference with detachment/awareness is that it is an underlying quality; it is the utmost foundation. Just becoming a little more detached/aware in waking life will help dramatically with lucid dreaming, will help with reality checks, with auto-suggestion, with all indirect methods to attaining that clarity.
You're of course completely right in that according to definition it can't be called a lucid dream without the underlying 'knowledge', but surely you have had what you would call a 'lucid dream' where the question wasn't asked, nor even considered? I have, and I know from asking that there are also many others, almost any experienced lucid dreamer I've asked has said they have. 'Just becoming lucid' instead of actually knowing they were dreaming, or even having the realisation.
 Originally Posted by Shift
I wouldn't throw detachment (I mean what is that referring to, anyway?) anywhere into that discussion, either. It's not really got anything to do with any of it. You don't have to be detached to be mentally aware in waking life, and you don't have to be detached to realize (be aware of the fact) that you're dreaming in a dream. It can help with your dream stabilization, and it can help you with dream control, but as far as actually realizing you are in a dream, it's not necessary to feel detached from the dream, only to observe that it isn't reality and you must be in a hallucination in your head while you sleep.
Detachment IS awareness, they are required for each other. I'm certainly not meaning to preach for some spiritualism.
Mental awareness requires detachment. If you are not detached from something, you cannot be aware of it, I relate the terms because they alone both carry different connotations, whereas together they paint a better picture imo.
 Originally Posted by Shift
Overall this philosophical discussion isn't too terrible for people who already know what lucid dreams are and how to have them (though I think there is of a considerable difference between someone who is a natural DILDer and someone who is not), but I think for newbies' sake this is a very confusing and inaccurate way of presenting the concept of lucid dreaming and really a philosophical discussion, not something that belongs on the on-topic board debating the difference between dreams and reality.
The simple point is: if you aren't aware that you are dreaming, then you are not lucid dreaming, no matter how mentally lucid you are otherwise.
I really didn't and don't intend this to be a philosophical discussion. The point is not to debate the difference between dreams and reality, dreams are 'in your head' or at least produced by and for solely the individual, waking life involves both (assumed) objective reality and then the layers of thought and interpretation (both conscious and sub-conscious) upon that, which are what internally make up dreams.
The point is to get newbies to see what I understand of 'lucidity'. Yes, by definition not lucid dreams, but by the one-and-the-same quality, very much so. Knowledge that you are dreaming is not required in waking life, nor dreaming life, to be detached and have the freedom to choose where to move with your mind. This affects everything within dreams, and affects the layers of mind that we control in waking life.
 Originally Posted by Shift
Dream Control (freedom) =/= Lucidity.
Yes, very correct, but then what is lucidity worth now but a definition? Who would strive to achieve psuedo-knowledge that they are dreaming? This is the exact reason I think the definition should be changed. Conscious dreaming is separated only from lucid dreaming because of a definition with a requisite supposition, the pseudo-knowledge that you are dreaming. It is extremely helpful, but it's not necessary to get what most want, and further down the lucid track it can even become too habitual, so that you stop having LDs and start having non-lucid dreams of lucidity.
You said yourself Shift, it's the awareness of the fact, not the fact itself. I'm saying one step further, that it's awareness, but not necessarily of the fact. The fact doesn't hold any potency itself, so why should it be a necessity to include in the equation at all. The realisation doesn't hold potency either, we don't cling onto that we're lucid the entire length of lucidity, we ride the detachment/awareness until we get attached/non-lucid again.
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