How can you disprove this argument: |
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How can you disprove this argument: |
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I don't see the problem, he described a very normal thing there.. |
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How can you disprove this argument? |
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My LDing record, if you want to hear about it, is about 4 WILDs, 1 DEILD, and the rest DILDs.
I was going to rant hardcore on this guy at first, but then I noticed that he was born long before Stephen LaBerge himself, so he can be excused. |
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Stephen LaBerge's Full Seminar in Russia, 1998
Стивен Лаберж - Осознанные сновидения. Весь семинар 1998.
Just because something feels real doesn't mean it is real though. You have a memory of being fully aware, but it is just that, a memory. Same applies with telling yourself you are in a dream and waking up on command. The voluntary eye signals could disprove it, but for the skeptics, there not been enough conclusive tests |
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Interesting theory, but you could say that about being awake, you are just imagining that you are walking and being social, you are just daydreaming the choices that you make, his argument is one directional and therefore invalid. |
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As Laurelindo has said. There have been experiments that have proven that it is possible to have conscious awareness in your dreams. Laberge's experiment with lucid dreamers moving their eyes in a way that was discussed earlier during sleep shows that the dreamers were indeed conscious that they were dreaming and had memory waking life. Not only that but if you were to ask any good lucid dreamer then they will say that their lucid dreams feel exactly like being awake in the real world except that they know that they are actually in a dream world of their own creation. This Professor simply has not experienced a real lucid dream. |
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Hi I'm new, but I just wanted to add what I thought when initially reading the title to this thread because although it's not completely related to what you are talking about, it is still a very interesting point to think about. |
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It is an opinion... but then, couldn't we be dreaming of waking life also? No one has been able to prove scientifically what lies beyond death other than termination of "life" What if death is just waking up from an even higher state of awakening (Let's say, the average dream time from that life is 80-90 years, ending sooner or later depending on life events) What if reincarnation is just going back to sleep? Time between incarnations might be waking time for a different lifetime... |
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Oh, apart from the study by Laberge there have been replications and MRI scans to lucid dreamers, showing that while lucid you are dreaming in a different way than a normal dream. A lucid dream has been proven in different ways, so while it may sound illogical to some there is enough evidence about it being real that it would be a futile effort to try using simple logic to discredit it, you would need to disprove the experiments and current data. |
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IMO to say that a lucid dream can be as real as waking life is not prove enough, it just happens with normal dreams as well. A skeptic could say that LaBerge's experiments don't prove anything because the subjects were incubating a normal dream in which they made the pre-determined eye movement. |
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Last edited by dreambh; 10-03-2014 at 01:35 PM.
Given that this quote was likely made before lucid dreaming was shown scientifically to exist (it looks like Malcom died in 1990), I don't think it is too terribly valid. That said: |
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I think it is better to be sure that you had three, based on the quality of the memory, than it is to convince yourself you had 9 because you have some vague memory of knowing that you are dreaming. LD'ing is not about quantity, but quality, and if you work toward really experiencing the state without concern for how many LD's you might have on the way, I think you will ultimately find yourself in a better, more lucid, place. |
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Most people think that as long as you told yourself "I'm dreaming" while in a dream, you are having a lucid dream, and acknowledge different levels of lucidity: from low level lucids where you knew it was a dream but your behavior is more like in a ND, to the full-fledged lucids when you fully understand everything is a dream and behave accordingly and your memory of the dream is just as WL memories. According to this you do not dream of being lucid, because dreaming of being lucid is technically having a LD. |
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Last edited by dreambh; 10-03-2014 at 03:59 PM.
I have heard you say this before Sageous, and I completely disagree that lucid dream memories are as powerful as waking. I have had a few times where I had a super awesome and aware lucid, wrote it down and went back to sleep. Woken up and not remembered it. Dug through memory and gotten nothing. Then looking back on my notes, remembered it. I believe others have had similar experiences. |
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Anyone who has had a lucid dream just laughs at the suggestion they are regular dreams, the science notwithstanding. Those who have never had one might think that, simply out of ignorance. The difference to me is basically dreaming vs alternate reality. Anyway, someone could assert reality does not exist and you are just dreaming reality. How do you disprove that? And in the end, does it really matter? |
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FryingMan's Unified Theory of Lucid Dreaming: Pay Attention, Reflect, Recall -- Both Day and Night[link]
FryingMan's Dream Recall Tips -- Awesome Links
“No amount of security is worth the suffering of a mediocre life chained to a routine that has killed your dreams.”
"...develop stability in awareness and your dreams will change in extraordinary ways" -- TYoDaS
I think the only thing that matters is your own experience. |
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Stephen LaBerge's Full Seminar in Russia, 1998
Стивен Лаберж - Осознанные сновидения. Весь семинар 1998.
Professor Malcolm is silly, and obviously had never had a lucid dream. IMO lucid dreams are "normal" dreams, the difference is you become aware within them. That's what differentiates them, your awareness. Once you become aware its a dream and "wake up" within the dream it becomes realistic and different feeling then non lucid dreams. |
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It quite depends on quality of lucid dream. There are lucid dreams in which we are conscious as if we were in reality and there are lucid dreams from which recalling your doubting if you were the dreamer inside dream or whether it was real experience. |
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I'm back! Again? Uhhh..
Fixed. |
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Last edited by Memm; 10-06-2014 at 09:22 AM.
Maybe? Please guys, if you are serious about how to prove lucid dreaming (well, if you are serious about lucid dreaming at all) you should check those links in my post back there. They show lucid dreaming is scientifically proven beyond any kind of doubt. |
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Last edited by dreambh; 10-06-2014 at 11:02 AM.
Well obviously something will show up in a brain scan but until we have the technology to map the entire consciousness all we really have is parts of the brain lighting up that we think are relevant. |
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