 Originally Posted by Conceptor
If it were true, you might be able to prove it by monitoring the brain activity of someone in a dream. I've heard that the right side of the brain is more active when a person is resting and dreaming. It is also the side of the brain that is credited for processes involving creativity, so it sounds like a sensible theory.
I'm not sure of the answer, but I did want to comment on your anecdote about songs, lyrics, and riddles in dreams. My opinion is these sorts of things will sound profound and sensible in the dream, but would be a total nonsense if you were able to reflect upon them when you are awake. Without having a full memory of what you heard in the dream, it isn't possible to verify the consistency and quality of it all.
It is very common for a person to dream about beautiful songs, lyrics, puzzles, or philosophical ideas, that seem incredible and sophisticated in the dream, but are laughable when reflected upon in real life. Just last week, I had a dream about a ghost who was able to reverse time, who managed to travel backwards to before he was born to induce his birth earlier, thus changing his future so he would not be involved in the circumstances that lead him to die. Instead, he was reborn and became a mob boss... naturally. This seemed like an explosive and exciting way to cheat death in the dream, and I was sure I had just discovered something important. That was until I woke up.
Well the thing is my friend's riddle actually does make sense upon, reflection:
"We eternal soldiers four,
Are all that's assured, for the poor.
What are we?"
The answer being the four horsemen of the apocalypse, with war, famine, pestilence, and death the only thing that's really assured for the poor in this world.
As for the mere fragments of songs I can recall, there is indeed rhythm and rhyme going on. The lyrical content is, to be sure, all about the nonsensical happenings of dreams, but I am more amazed by the fact it all composed together and rhymed. I can't recall enough of the songs to make the whole, but I can recall enough to know they did rhyme.
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