I have been keeping an eye out, and holding out hope for, some sort of evidence of astral planes, parallel universes, or whatever other esoteric term you want to attach to dreams taking one outside of their own mind, and to date I have found very little... same goes for dreams or dreamworlds being created outside the mind. I've seen some incredibly weird shit over the years, but little that indicates that the source of my dreams being anything but my own mind.
I have had some experiences that hint that dreams might allow the mind to "wander" a bit from its cranial realm, perhaps to intermingle with the thoughts of other wandering minds, but that wandering is likely done within the confines of this universe, and this plane of existence.
I think that the almost limitless capability of our minds to create content, and to virtually satisfy our expectations, has created a situation where we choose to disbelieve our own imaginations. In other words, you find yourself in a dream that you simply cannot believe you created on your own (especially after waking); so instead of accepting your mind's incredible ability to create dreamscapes, you humbly decide that this stuff can't be coming from you, and that the wonder you are witnessing must be from another dimension or universe. Such a stance leads to some truly creative concepts to explain (upon waking) where these dreams took you, concepts like astral travel and many of the tenets of older religions and theosophy.
Note that I said "upon waking" a couple of times above. I often wonder how many self-described astral travelers "know" they are traveling astrally during their lucid dream, or if they come to that conclusion after they wake up. I think this distinction is important. If there are any AP'ers out there, before they quickly respond that they are sure they are AP'ing when they do it, I hope they might sit down and really think for a moment about whether or not they know they are in other realms during their travels, or if those conclusions are drawn after waking. Also, if they do know that they are on other planes, I wonder how many of them lucidly test their spiritual relocation while on other planes, perhaps by making some simple change to the dream, just to be sure they are not still in their own mind.
On sort of the same note, I had to respond to this as well:
 Originally Posted by Psionik
... the more lucid you are the less unreal dream seems to be.
This I feel is backward. When you are not lucid, your dream almost by definition is "real" -- one of the parameters of non-lucid dreaming is that you are sure that all this stuff around you is totally, irreversibly real, just as one major aspect of becoming lucid is the recognition that this place you are in is not real (that is why we all do RC's, BTW). And, the more lucid you are, the less real your surroundings become, to the point where you finally understand that this entire dream is a construct of your own mind, and has no place in reality at all. Now, that understanding of your dream's non-reality does not preclude astral travel, because doing that would imply other realities or planes of existence, which also are unreal in terms of their relation to earthly reality.
If you were talking about vividness or clarity, Psionlink: Yes, LD's might often be more vivid than regular dreams, but increased vividness does not imply reality; just better resolution.
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