Mr Damon, I must have missed that in your original post, sorry for the confusion. Now that I understand you already know the techniques, and are just looking to practice them on "dream people", I guess I would say that I don't think lucid dream fighting could serve as any kind of substitute for real practice or sparring, but it could help a little just like any kind of extra practice or visualization. In the martial arts studies I have done, considerable time is spent on "forms" or "kata", where you are repeating movements thousands and thousands of times. I think doing these in your sleep could not hurt, just like it is good to practice them while awake.
The same is true for fighting. You probably already know all this, but once you have the techniques down by rote memory, where you are dealing with a predertimined attack or a cooperative partner, then with lots and lots of practice in different and competitive situations, you learn to apply them unconsciously to actual attacks. The idea is to be able to respond without thinking, so that your reactions are reflexive or intuitive, without conscious thought. This can be practiced even while awake, by closing your eyes and imagining attackers, and by performing the actual movements as though you were doing them against a real person. There is value in this exercise, and I think there would be value in doing it in lucid dreams too. Maybe you could get a better sense of reality and spontaneity in a lucid dream, in that sense I think you have a great idea! But, that by itself could not be enough to prepare one for the real thing, in my opinion. I would never allow my students to substitute imagination or dreams for real practice, at least not without telling them it is purely a mental exercise, and it cannot be relied upon for self defense.
Clearly no good athlete could achieve proficiency or mastery strictly by visualization, they have to go through the real thing for many years. If you already know the techniques through years and years of practice and actual application, then maybe lucid dream fighting could serve as some form of "brushing up" on your skills or keeping them from getting too rusty, but you still need the real practice too I think. And, you need the unpredictability of an opponent who does not think like you or who behaves in unexpected and (detrimental to you) ways.
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