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The Oneironic-I A theory of how one’s sense of self continues and changes during lucid dreams.

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Presentation on theme: "The Oneironic-I A theory of how one’s sense of self continues and changes during lucid dreams."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Oneironic-I A theory of how one’s sense of self continues and changes during lucid dreams.

2 Origins of Oneiros n The ancient Greek work for dream was “Oneiros”. n In Prometheus Bound, the ancient Greek philosopher Aeschylus called the art of dream interpretation “Oneiromancy”. n LaBerge a modern day lucid dream researcher calls explorers of the dream state “Oneironauts”.

3 What is Self? n Most writers focus on the “self-concept”, “self-esteem”, personality traits or the self in a reflective, subjective manner. n Sense of self as overlapping memories. n Sense of self as a bundle of perceptions. n Sense of self as a narrative structure and story. n Sense of self as a collage of socially conditioned intepretations..

4 Dan’s working definition of an Oneironic-I or self n Derived “duplex notion of the self” from William James and George Herbert Mead. n with the “I”, the self as observer, AND n with the “me”, the self as the observations of that observer.

5 What’s lucid dreaming all about?

6 Lucid dreaming is… n Being able to consciously recognize that you are dreaming while you are dreaming n Once aware you are dreaming, acting to consciously control and change the context & characters of the dream in real time n And why? Its an exhilarating experience, travel to exotic locations, meet interesting people, do things you couldn’t when awake

7 What’s a lucid dream like?

8 Yes, you are asleep when you are lucid dreaming! n LaBerge’s PhD dissertation (1977) at Stanford empirically verifies a dreamer can be lucid while asleep. n How so?

9 Your 90 minute sleep cycle

10 The researchers say…. n Green (1968) - lucid dreams are accurate imitations of waking life. n LaBerge (1988) - dreaming of doing something is equivalent to actually doing it. n Moffitt (1988) - we dream to find out who we are. n Wolf (1994) - we dream so that a sense of “I” manifests.

11 Dan’s theory of the Oneironic-I

12 Your lucid dreaming self is an extension of your waking self. n Lucid dream research suggests that one’s sense of self extends across a continuum of conscious states. n In lucid dreams you have: a self- concept, reflexivity, memories, perceptions, narratives structures and socially constructed realities

13 And so The Oneironic-I is…. n a self-perceived continuity in the sameness of the person, The “I”, the lucid dream OBSERVER. n a self-perceived continuity in the person’s self attributes, The “Me”, the lucid dream OBSERVATIONS.

14 As an Oneronic-I Your Dreams Become You


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