On 13 Aug, 14:00, rigsy03 <[email protected]> wrote:
> Our dreams may be nothing more than a garbage disposal of excess
> thoughts to freshen the mind for the next day. On the other hand,
> daydreams and musings may lead to inventions (See: "Einstien's Dreams"
> by Alan sombebody or other who taught creative writing at M.I.T.) and
> creativity or problem solving. Our imagination has been diminished by
> media overload, unfortunately.
>

If I REALLY believe...will Sarah Palin disappear??  Assuming
Tinkerbell logic, of course.

Apologies, your comment of 'media overload' immediately brough her to
mind.  ;-)


> On Aug 13, 7:14 am, Pat <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > On 9 Aug, 14:54, "pol.science kid" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > no.. i dont know  wat  dreams  are  made of..but i was wondering.. why
> > > is it that we are able to 'remember' our dreams.. like a real
> > > memory..like something happening in real life..i mean the only way we
> > > know it was a dream is the fact that we remember waking up too...now i
> > > know i can read a lot of books and wat not on the topic..but since i
> > > am already burdened with the social science literature in my
> > > curriculum i was hoping one of you guys might give me a lucid
> > > explanation...
>
> > I tend to generally agree with Molly.  We remember dreams because we
> > experience them.  We live 'through' them like we live 'through' waking
> > life.  As far as how we perceive a flow to events AS memory, science
> > has no answer.  I do, though.  It boils down to having a 2-D
> > consciousness that allows us to integrate the 4-D slices of space time
> > as we exist on the bow-wave of the expansion OF space-time and move
> > past those 4-D slices.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

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