T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
887.1 | Sort of a similar experience | JOKUR::PLOETZ | Paula Ploetz | Tue Oct 18 1988 10:34 | 8 |
| I haven't had a similar dream, but about seven years ago, I was
in college and had a SO. One night, when we were sleeping together,
we had the same dream! That was amazing. I know it is true,
because He told ME About it, and I knew what I had dreamed.
Interesting, but I don't have a clue why.
Paula
|
887.2 | Cherokee dreaming | SHRFAC::BRUNDIGE | | Tue Oct 18 1988 13:07 | 9 |
|
To the Cherokee if two people have the same dream then they are
connected spiritually. This connection is stronger than brother,
sister, mother or father in that it is spiritual. The age or sex
of the people does not matter. Also the content of the dream may
not have any "meaning" to the people concerned.
Russ
SW
|
887.3 | Synchronous dreams? | LACV02::EHRHARDT | Caminante, no hay camino... | Sat Oct 29 1988 00:15 | 19 |
| Scott Peck in his book, The_Road_less_Traveled, talks about the events
discussed in the prior notes. He states that it has been proven in
laboratories that an awake individual can transmit images to a sleeping
individual many rooms away. He states that he has also experienced
this; he picked up a sequence of images from a house guest that had
dreamed the same sequence of images two nights previously. He
classifies these events as falling under the principles of
synchronicity.
Re: .0-1
Sounds good to me. Imagine being so close to someone that you're
tapping into the same dream! You begin to wonder who's the one
creating the dream.
Re: .0
Perhaps the "massacre down the hall" was referring to the
vice-presidential debates.
jge
|
887.4 | Dream Telepathy. | ERLTC::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Oct 31 1988 12:25 | 24 |
| RE: .3 (jge)
> ... it has been proven in laboratories that an awake individual
> can transmit images to a sleeping individual many rooms away.
This is obviously a reference to the research done by Kripner, Ulman
and others at the Miamedes (sp) Dream Resarch Lab in New York.
There methods and results may be found in the excellent, quite
readable book: Dream Telepathy. The critics have never adequately
dealt with these experiments -- virtually all the criticisms have
been based on statements which are easily refuted in terms of the
records -- most of them quite obviously so from the easily available
book mentioned above.
The main weakness of these results is that few attempts have been
made to directly, independently replicate them, and all have been
on a much smaller scale with predictably more ambiguous outcomes.
Chuck Honortons Ganzfeld experiments -- which use people in a
relaxed, altered state of consciousness with vivid imagery rather
than dreaming people -- is the most active, successful modern
continuation of that research.
Topher
|