The most original and
revealing scientific study of dreams – the only kind that is likely to bring us
the big stuff – is research inside dreams, rather than research about dreams.
Charting a path for
future research, William C. Dement, a pioneer of scientific investigation of
sleep and dreams, appealed back in the 1970s for “trained
introspectionists to give us somewhat more confident information about what
goes on in the mind during sleep.” Dement suggested that the most important
research would require science to recognize that there are some individuals who
seem to be “supremely good at recalling their dreams.” Perhaps they could be
encouraged not only to increase their recall even further but to attain some
degree of mental control inside the dreamstate “which would allow them to
attend to the dream more closely with the idea of remembering it and reporting
it.”
Dement concluded: “Our
major data about the dream world should come from those best able to describe
it” – dream experiencers. [1]
Marquis d'Hervey de Saint-Denys |
A century before
Dement made his remarks, the Marquis d'Hervey de Saint-Denys (1822-1892), a
French aristocrat and oriental scholar, made this type of research his ruling
passion. He started observing his dreams closely at the age of thirteen, as a
way of whiling away his time after completing lessons with his private tutors.
Within a year, he noticed he was often aware while dreaming of his “true
situation” - that he was dreaming – and was able to “guide their development”
consciously. He dreamed, for example, that he was among flowering lilac trees.
Aware that he was dreaming, he remembered reading that our memories of smell
are “seldom correct” when we wake from dreams. “I caught hold of the branch,
and first assured myself that the smell of lilac was recalled in my memory by
this imaginary but voluntary act.” [2]
Over decades,
Saint-Denys became an intrepid investigator inside his dreams, producing and
exploring dream images that revolved around his research
interests. “During the day I reflected on the subjects most worthy of
examination; at night, during the dreams in which I was aware of my situation,
I sought every possible opportunity to discover and analyze.” [3]
There was a curious
blind spot in his dream exploration. He believed that dream images all derive
from our waking experiences: that whatever we see in dreams is constructed from
life memories. Scientist that he was, he tested this by his experiential
method. Perhaps the fact that he was not able – by his own account – to
identify dreamscapes that were unrelated to waking life memories was a function
of his own belief system. That would fit his own observation that whenever he
thought about something in a conscious dream, a corresponding scene or image
appeared. Dream images, he concluded, are “the representation in our mind’s eye
of the objects that occupy our thoughts.”
Our best dream
scientists are likely to be assiduous dream journalists, keeping detailed logs of their own
experiences in the dream worlds, and those shared with them. By collecting and
pooling data of this kind, we can overwhelm the silly reductionism that
dismisses one-off dream reports as "anecdotal." If we can point to
1,000 or even 100 dated and authentic dream reports suggestive of precognition,
or dream diagnosis, or interactive or social dreaming, we have evidence for
these phenomena that cannot be shrugged off because it failed to meet
laboratory standards.
Active dreamers following my methods and sharing results have now gone a long way in assembling a remarkable data bases of this kind. We are not only assembling evidence of the play of "supernormal" abilities like precognition, telepathy and clairvoyance in dreams, but logging serial dreams suggestive of parallel realities and shared, interactive experiences in other realities that seem to be no less "real" than the ordinary world.
Active dreamers following my methods and sharing results have now gone a long way in assembling a remarkable data bases of this kind. We are not only assembling evidence of the play of "supernormal" abilities like precognition, telepathy and clairvoyance in dreams, but logging serial dreams suggestive of parallel realities and shared, interactive experiences in other realities that seem to be no less "real" than the ordinary world.
In these areas, the big game will always elude those who
try to pen it in cages. The real dream scientist will seek it where it is to be
found, deep in the forests of the night.
Quantum pioneer and Nobel laureate Wolfgang Pauli, himself a world-class dreamer, said that “We need a new science to explore the objective side of
human consciousness and the subjective side of matter: a science willing to
embrace both objective and subjective avenues to discovery while recognizing
the legitimacy of individual
experience.” Active dreamers are on it.
Quantum pioneer and Nobel laureate Wolfgang Pauli, himself a world-class dreamer, said that
References
1. William C.
Dement, “Proposals for future research” in Gabrielle C. Lairy and Pero
Salzarulo (eds) The Experimental Study of Human Sleep: Methodological Problems (Amsterdam: Elsevier, 1975) 442.
2. Marquis d'Hervey
de Saint-Denys, Dreams and How to Guide Them trans. Nicholas Fry, ed. Morton Schatzman M.D. (London:
Duckworth, 1982) 56.
3. ibid, 20.
For the role of dreaming in the history of science, please see The Secret History of Dreaming. For a leading-edge experiential adventure exploring themes discussed here, look for my next online course "Active Dreaming: The Essential Training".
For the role of dreaming in the history of science, please see The Secret History of Dreaming. For a leading-edge experiential adventure exploring themes discussed here, look for my next online course "Active Dreaming: The Essential Training".
An integral English Translation of Hervey de Saint-Denys' book has been published as a free of charge E-book with the title 'Dreams and the Ways to Direct Them:Practical Observations', obtainable at the English section of the site www.carolusdenblanken.nl
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