 Originally Posted by MoonageDaydream
You have to admit, though, that it is amazing how in a lucid dream you can taste, touch, smell, etc. and it is just like waking reality.
It really is amazing how accurate the representation can get, but also how much more different and unreal as well. That's the more mind blowing part of it all in my opinion. I remember my very first lucid dream, where I stood in awe for a few minutes inside my own kitchen and I couldn't believe the amount of clarity and vividness of such a scene. I had probably walked more than a million times around that kitchen, and I've never seen the vibrancy of colors as those displayed that night. Truly breathtaking.
And yet, your nose isn't actually smelling anything at the time. How does that work? Why can you lick a wall in a dream, and have it taste like damp stone? I mean, that's just amazing to me. Which is why I spend a good amount time in my LDs just touching things, and exploring the sensory experiences around me.
We must remember that our eyes, our nose, our ears, our tongue, our skin, they do not work in isolation. It is all a thorough system comprising sensory organs, a network of nerves and the central nervous system that which gives us our perception of the world. And on top of it all, it is the brain that dictates the experience. What's best is, the brain does not exclusively require a physical input for it to sense and properly architect our perception of reality, assuming no component in the system is failing.
Consider how you can see a perfectly good apple only through imagination. There is no apple outside in front of you, and even so, your mind can perfectly reproduce such an experience. Consider how fear can make your hairs stand straight even if you know for sure there isn't any form of physical danger threatening you right now. Drugs and disease can make anyone hallucinate of any type you can think of, whether visual, auditory, olfactory, taste, touch, etc. Our brain is amazing.
And by that same token, it allows us to live out our wildest dreams with unprecedented detail. That's what excites me most. How much it doesn't get reality, but rather boost it X100.
But giving the topic further thought, what I really want to see is: Can a lucid dream construct an accurate representation of an experience we haven't lived through before?
If I've never gone skydiving before in my life, and I were to do so in a lucid dream, if I then later do a jump while awake, will it be the same?
I've never tasted ramen before in my life, if I do and then later compare its taste to its waking life counterpart, will both taste the same?
What if I grab a couple of weights in my dream and compare the feeling (at that exact weight) at the gym?
What about the other-worldly or more fantasy-like aspects of dreams, like going through space, flying, walking on the moon, etc.?
Here's a thought: Let's say we come back to our example concerning that bowl of ramen. If we compare that initial taste and we come out with the same result, what does that say about our dreams and the way our brain architects the dream world?
If later on after the fact, inside another dream I set out to serve me another bowl, and the taste comes out differently this time, better even, what does that say about the change in perception for this dish? Is the increase in taste a more accurate representation? Or is it inaccurate/not real?
Also, I want to point out that me saying things not being perceived as "real" does not mean to say they aren't authentic or that they do not exist or that they hold no impact, quite the contrary. I believe whatever it is we can live through as lucid dreamers might hold an even greater value and power precisely because of the reason of it being different/better/unreal.
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