 Originally Posted by zoth00
This isn't really true.
And the entire text has a lot of incoherences, so I don't think it's really more than a rumor.
It's not true simply because obviously, there's no connections in actually defining it scientifically. But I wouldn't disregard this phenomena or some simulation completely of the brain that could potentially unlock the totality of what you experienced in this life.
Especially with clear awareness of what dreaming portrays to us, I wouldn't say this is too far-fetched, it's just the principles that he laid out may not seem practical to you or most of the people trying to string together a sentence from it.
Even though dreams and the subconscious' way of scatter-braining the whole experience make dreams not meaningful to the average joe (not saying you are), it's still another level of consciousness he's implying, and despite the inconsistencies of this exercise (which is really just similar to meditation), it's similar to deeper levels of meditations and such.
The analogies he's using seems to be related to something like the Akashic Records, Book of Life, and otherworldy concepts which is presumed to be the the totality of your present lives, your current life, and possible future lives based on your trends in this life. Although the Records themselves and this exercise that's similar to it aren't real (like being tangible in this reality), it's presumed to be just in another state of consciousness (or a spiritual state for those who are into that stuff).
So I wouldn't think there's actually a part in our brain that would hold all of those memories with flawless expression and free from distortion, but in terms of knowledge and creativity during REM sleep and deep sleeping, maybe it's possible, with practice, to access memories within spiritual states of being.
And even if that were the case, the sheer amount of content would just be interpreted as a bunch of incoherent bits, at least for the mental capacity for a person to recall all of that (which is probably why in the exercise itself, you would have to take things slowly to actually conceptualize an event/experience).
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