Your response is intriguing, shadowofwind.
 Originally Posted by shadowofwind
Venyrx, I don't think that anyone can provide you with any "proof" that can't be faked. I have some e-mail evidence that I know I didn't fake, but there's no way to demonstrate that to someone else. So I think if you want proof, you have to have the experiences yourself.
It's true that someone's sharing of an email isn't "proof" in the societal sense, ie. if you try to share an email, some will claim you sent it yourself. However, on an individual level, sharing that sort of content can be pretty convincing for the person who first requested it.
To be more specific, due to the circumstances by which my contact with you has developed (my asking for a copy of someone else's email, but then finding someone else allude to their having something similar themself, after having already been active in the thread apart from my asking) I'm someone who would believe you if you sent a screenshot of an email with evidence of shared dreaming.
In other words, while I don't have "proof" that the emails in question are genuine, I have good reason to think they are, because:
1) You were not actively seeking out people to try to convince. (most people who hoax things will immediately seek others out to share it, not wait till someone else brings it up)
2) You were already active in this thread, writing substantial posts. (due to time constraints, it's not very reasonable for a hoaxer to get involved in lots of threads, if their sole purpose is to trick people who eventually might ask for evidence)
3) You write thoughtfully and coherently, and you seem genuinely interested in the subject. If you were a hoaxer of evidence for it, I'd expect a more controlled and elusive writing style. (deflecting counter-points, instead of demonstrating understanding of them and accepting that providing definitive proof is difficult)
And finally, the one you might find the most unexpected:
4) I have, in fact, already done pretty extensive, personal experimentation on the link between the mind and remote entities (that is, "extensive" relative to mainstream attention/acceptance; "just the beginning" relative to what is possible). In my case, my experimentation was directed toward "psi" rather than shared dreaming, but it's plausible that the mechanism behind one would be the same as the mechanism behind the other.
To be more specific, I purchased a "hardware-based random number generator" (the BitBabbler black: TRNG hardware, software, and testing - BitBabbler), coded my own software to translate the output from the device into actions on-screen, and starting running "sessions" where I would "will"/"intend" the results to trend toward the designated target. (with my computer recording the results of every session in a database) [Note: The software does make use of the mouse, but only to change the location of an on-screen "intention-focusing" marker. The code that runs the simulation is entirely separate from the code that changes the location of the marker.]
It will surprise some to hear (as it did me!) that the experiment -- yes -- succeeded. And it didn't just succeed "nominally"; the results deviated from chance so far that it reached a peak "rarity by chance" of 1 in more than 32,000 (32,258, to be precise -- with the control series remaining under the 1 in 20 threshold throughout the entire experiment). After that "peak", the results did begin to weaken. One might consider it to still have been "trending" in the right direction (depending on the length of the evaluation window), but because the trend intensity was much weaker, the rarity-by-chance value began to drop. Because of this, I put the experiment on hold (ending at a rarity by chance value of 1 in 2,808).
See here for screenshots/graphs of the results from the experiment: https://imgur.com/a/iKkSxKn
I did consider resuming shortly after, if pre-marked-as-such "test" sessions showed the effect restrengthening; but I only tried this once or twice before deciding it wasn't worth the time on a continuation that some people wouldn't consider legitimate anyway. (Since it increases the chance of the effect being based just on some environmental variation between days. Since I'm familiar with the code, I knew this to be very unlikely, since the random-number generation process applies a "simplify each from-device number to just a 1 or 0 (based on an alternating more-than/less-than mapping), sum it with 199 other such 1s/0s, and use the result as your actual number" filtering process, which dramatically mitigates the effects of any large-scale environment changes. But since this takes further explanation, and is another component for people to dis-earnestly criticize, I figured it was best to leave the result as is and just start fresh with a new, more comprehensive experiment in the future.)
(I'll eventually get back to psi experimentation, but there's other things I'm focusing on right now; I got what I wanted out of my initial experimentation foray, and when I return to it I intend to expand the experimentation and make it easy for anyone to set up and perform themselves -- and with the streamlined ability to combine everyone's results into a global result set. However, if someone is intent on replicating my experiment right now, I'm willing to help you do so, so long as you aren't lazy about your half of the setup. ^_^)
It's also worth noting that throughout my experimentation process, I updated my friends with the results as they developed (specifically, over Google Hangouts). Like you mention shadow, there's no definitive way to prove oneself as an honest person; but just as I trust your account based on heuristics (writing style, understanding of epistemology, the path by which the person came in contact, etc.), so also I'm hoping people will be able to recognize my own account as genuine.
Because I often get frustrated with the lack of transparency from other people claiming they have evidence of things (but that the evidence is just not currently accessible for some reason), let me break with that trend by being upfront:
1) About a year ago, I became interested in the subject of psi. I considered it quite unlikely (~10% probability), but I was interested in it enough that I thought I'd look into it more.
2) I spent weeks doing extensive reading on existing psi research. The results were not conclusive, but they were much better than I expected. By the end of my research, I was seriously considering the possibility that psi is real.
3) During my reading, I also came to find that tons of people who criticized psi (and the research), were doing so based not on reasonable complaints, but just because they found the idea "ridiculous". For example, a group would do a study and obtain positive results (rarity-by-chance values of over a thousand, over a million, over a billion), and critics would just ignore the data and complain about "problems" with the study that they didn't even take the time to see if they applied. In many cases, the "problems" were known by the researchers before they even started their work, and they carefully prevented it from coming up. The critics never knew this though because they didn't even take the time to look at the paper (and others hearing of it dismissed the research immediately because they assumed those complaints were valid).
4) Although the data from existing research was promising, there is always the concern that some of the researchers were making mistakes or outright lying. While selective reporting was already shown insufficient for many of the study sets (the amount of deviation from chance is just too high, given how many studies would have had to have been discarded to yield the given global average), the doubts about competency or honesty are ones which are harder to definitively rule out. This is true of every field, but it's especially prevalent for subjects that are not currently accepted by the mainstream. Because of this, I decided I would perform psi experiments myself: this way I have direct access to the source code (to verify for myself that the code and analysis-algorithms are accurate), and because I am the sole test subject, I know there's no deception going on during the test sessions.
5) I got to work and coded a simple experiment, where I try to will the number generator to yield more high numbers than low numbers. This first attempt had interesting (imo) results, but ultimately did not reach the traditional bar of "significance" (ie. a termination-point rarity by chance of 1 in 20 or better).
6) I designed and coded a second experiment, specifically designed to amplify the "psi effect" if one were to exist (the basic idea is that I had two targets, a positive and a negative, but the negative target was concealed to prevent subconscious "psi missing"; once the session completed, it would then tell me how many times the visible "positive" target was hit relative to the unknown-location "negative" target). This is the experiment I mention above; the results were (in my opinion) very successful -- performed over about twenty days, with a streak of 13 straight days of gains at one point.
The good part:
7) The device I used is a commercial product that anyone can buy. (and I still have my copy, which still functions)
8) I still have access to all of the data from my experiment. It was not lost to a fire, accidental deletion, etc., so I am able to deliver if someone asks me for it.
9) Because I updated my friends with what was happening during the process (both my reading as well as my experimentation), I have multiple third-parties who can verify that things developed as I describe. (If someone wants contact info, I can provide it on request through private-messaging.)
10) The experiment was done carefully (well, for an experiment that some random software-developer put together; it's not as air-tight as a years-in-the-planning lab study done by a room full of PhD professors, but oh well), and with precise rarity-by-chance values calculated (based on Monte-Carlo simulations). Because of this, I can give a distinct number to people who ask how significant the results really were, in a way that rational people cannot just ignore. (Instead of having to rely on a person's subjective opinion of how significant some result is. Not that subjective analysis is useless; however, it's much easier for people to brush-off/dismiss that if the theory clashes with their existing worldview.)
11) The software was self-developed, and is not part of some organizational distribution barrier, so I can share it with anyone who's willing to try replicating the experiment. (I can work with you on request if you're interested. I just haven't done so yet because it will take a fair amount of time to package up nicely, and no one has shown a serious interest yet.)
Anyway, if the above text-version is too boring, here's a link again to the screenshots/graphs of the results from that second experiment: https://imgur.com/a/iKkSxKn
In summary, I'm actually pretty open to the idea of remote interactions. I say that I'm skeptical of shared dreaming because, even though I do now believe in psi (not conclusively, but I do consider it more likely than not), I'm skeptical about how much that psi connection is involved in the seeming correlations between specific dream accounts. I think there probably is some connection (just from general psi interaction), but I have doubts about how substantial that connection is. (as opposed to it mostly just being coincidence, misremembering, exaggerating, and/or selective reporting)
That might sound bad, but I think a healthy skepticism is good to have, as long as you're genuinely open to considering new evidence that comes in. For me, this is how I currently approach shared dreaming: skeptical, but interested, and willing to hear more. (and eventually experiment myself, most likely)
So anyway, my point is that I do care quite a bit about potential evidence for things like psi or shared dreaming, so if you have evidence for such things, I'm very interested in seeing it! (I'm not just a critic looking for something to shoot down ^_^)
 Originally Posted by shadowofwind
A few years ago, I used to taunt skeptics a little bit on this point. It seemed to me that a lot of people's skepticism came down to fear, since they were willing to argue endlessly about shared dreaming, but not willing to try it. Now I think that it is important to respect that fear, and not try to push someone's buttons until they decide to try something that they don't really want to do.
I personally think it usually has more to do with arrogance than fear. A lot of the critics I encountered on existing psi research, seemed to be treating the papers as something just to laugh at and feel better about themselves for confidently rejecting (while providing only shallow, condescending, and sometimes just plain wrong justifications for). I suppose a subset of them might be from fear as well, but I don't think it's the most common reason.
 Originally Posted by shadowofwind
Here's a possible experience to try: Ask yourself a question, something you care about fairly deeply, like the answer to a philosophical or psychological issue. Be open, in other words willing to not control your own dreams. Write down what you dream afterwards. I'll make note of my dream and send it to you. If my dream contains imagery or other details from your life that I could not have known otherwise, then there's some evidence. Since I share my dream first, you'll know I'm not faking it. Then if you share your dream, I might be able to provide some additional explanation. My dreams tend to be fairly metaphorical, so there will probably be enough subjectivity in interpretation that you wouldn't be sure that its not just a coincidence or reading stuff into it that's not there. But once you get a small sense of the experience, if you keep pulling on that string and wanting to know, you may get clearer experiences later. That's how it went for me anyway.
I think I probably went through a similar experience while beginning my research into psi, and eventual experiments on it. If the quirks of psi research apply also to the phenomenon of shared dreaming (assuming it is real), then I have some idea of what that process could look like.
Two interesting things about psi research is that, 1, it's not as straight-forward to study as some people assume, because the phenomenon appears to interact significantly with the state of mind of both the test subject and the researcher (this is unfortunate, but it does not make research pointless, as some critics like to pretend). And 2, it's quite the adventure to gain first-hand experience of discovering a whole field of studies I never knew existed, realizing how biased mainstream thought can be and how swiftly people will discard scientific approaches when it strays too far from their preconceptions, and thinking about what implications such phenomena may have on the nature of the world, if in fact they are genuine.
 Originally Posted by shadowofwind
The reason I suggest asking a philosophical question, is that's the kind of thing the 'shared dreaming' part of me cares about. It has no interest in trading passwords or predicting lottery numbers or other such things. I don't control it, and I don't make any attempt to influence my own dreams, it just happens or it doesn't. I almost don't even dream now, so I don't know if anything will happen if we try this, but its easy to try. Previously, I seemed to be about 50% successful with this sort of thing. In one case I don't know if it was real or if the other person was making up his dream afterwards to make it match mine. In another case the sharing was objectively real. In another case or two I believed it was real, and so did the other person, but it was subjective, without objective evidence. In one or two cases the other person did not dream at all. Here I'm only talking about deliberate attempts to do this on this web site. Most of my experiences have been spontaneous, not deliberate like this.
Well thank you for the offer! Most people are not serious enough about these sorts of subjects to actually put in time to try to see if they are true. Most will not even spend a half hour to do some Google searches for existing research on the topic.
On your offer specifically: That sounds fun, and I'd like to do so. I have a similar problem that I'm currently not having that many vivid dreams. I'm experimenting with some software-driven LD induction ideas (eg. having it generate random 3-digit numbers, with me trying to train my memory by repeating it back the next time I awake), and I've had some successful inductions, but I'm still a far way off from reliability. I know lucidity isn't necessary for what you propose, but for me, I usually don't have vivid/detailed/memorable dreams unless the spark of lucidity first gets introduced into it.
In summary, I'd like to try your idea, but I'm not sure how long it will take. Maybe how we can do it is, I'll formulate a subject that's meaningful to me as a suitable "target". I'll then wait until I have a dream that deals with the subject substantially. I'll then send you a message (or post in this thread), letting you know I've completed my side, and have recorded the result. (And I'll post my dream and thoughts to a third-party site which shows the "last edit time", so that once you've posted your dream, I can link you to my own pre-written account, and we can compare them to each other -- knowing that neither has been tampered with after reading the other's.)
 Originally Posted by shadowofwind
As I've explained elsewhere, probably even in this thread, it doesn't matter if we're both asleep at the same time, it doesn't work that way. Just pick the next sleep after you read this, if you decide you want to do it, so we know which dreams we're trying to compare.
We could do it that way, but I'd rather wait until one of us (probably me) has a substantial dream on the target before starting the process. This way we have a higher chance of finding "noteworthy matches", as opposed to if it's based on a hazier dream with few details (where even if you manage to match something in my life, it's less demonstrable to other readers by means of the raw dream accounts).
By the way, I've always been kinda curious why some (eg. you, zenith, and many others) are not interested in "proving" things like this as much as I am. For me, one of the most important things to do, before you spend a lot of time on something, is to obtain clear evidence that it is real so you can convince the wider world. Why? Because if you can convince the wider world, you can increase the amount of research that gets done on it.
I mean, imagine if the world woke up tomorrow, and 80% of scientists were convinced shared dreaming is real. Can you imagine how quickly our knowledge of the subject would advance? So I can understand why it might not be interesting personally to someone to obtain clear evidence, but aren't you guys at least interested in it because of what it would mean for expanding how much research is done on the subject?
Anyway, looking forward to our eventual SD attempt! (As well as the email interaction you mentioned -- that should be fun to read, even if not conclusive )
I just need to think of what question to use as the target now...
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