Well I can only speak for myself, and I don't consider myself a "precog." I simply have had occasional dreams of experiences that later occured precisely as I dreamt them, whether it was a conversation with someone or being in a place I had never been before, etc.
And I wouldn't refer to my experiences as "predicting" because, if I'm not mistaken, that's an active attempt to determine the future. I simply have had dreams of events and experiences that later happen. I have no control over them. I have never chosen or attempted to have such dreams. They've just happened on very rare occasions throughout my life.
And no, I don't have any idea how my dreams might predict the future until the event or experience I dreamed about comes to pass. The only way I can verify that it was a precognitive dream is to consciously analyse and remember my dreams. Once in awhile I will have a particularly vivid dream that stands out in my memory, and at some point, usually just a few days later, I will simply find myself in the situation I dreamt about, listening to people say, word-for-word, what they said in my dream. It's a surrealisitic experience, like being in a scene from a play and knowing everyone's lines before they speak.
The thing is, none of my precognitive dreams have ever had any grand significance, at least not to anyone but me. I've never dreamt of a plane crashing before it did or the assassination of world leader. Just personal experiences, many of which were rather mundane, but unmistakably precisely what I had dreamed of prior to them happening. That's it. I have no Nostradamus-type visions to offer. In fact I don't even believe Nostradamus was a "precog," whatever that means.
But, if you're asking me to prove the feasibility of precognitive dreams, I can't. Not anymore than you can disprove them. If you're asking me to explain how it happens, the truth is I don't know and have never really questioned it myself. When you grow up doing something, and later find out it's supposedly "impossible," you're more likely to wonder why no one else seems to be having the same experiences, rather than why you do.
But as for the concept being impossible, as I've said elsewhere in this forum, lucid dreaming was deemed laughably "impossible" by nearly every neurologist and psychiatrist in the world prior to the 1970's. So no, I don't think there's any reason to assume precognitive dreams are impossible.
Every year, hundreds of thousands of first year psychology students, in colleges and universities across the U.S., take part in a mass experiment to study the possible existance of ESP. Every year, since the 1960's, the numbers have consistantly shown a slightly higher rate of success than the statistical probability. Can you logically explain that away? Or why remote viewing has been consistently proven accurate in scientific experiments to the point of being employed as an intelligence program by the U.S. Military?
The funny thing is, you seem to think you've got a handle on the "real world" and anyone who doesn't agree is delusional. But if you believe in science and reason, the truth is science and reason are proving things that don't match up in your "real world." Quantum Physics anyone? If the numbers don't lie, maybe you should take another look at what they're saying.
Something like precognitive dreams is virtually impossible to prove or disprove in any laboratory. But since you're a fan of logic and reason, doesn't it follow logically to observe the scientific study of similiar "impossible" experiences like ESP or Remote Viewing? And if some of them prove true, however slightly, doesn't it logically follow that precognition is at least possible?
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