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- From: rowe@pender.ee.upenn.edu (Mickey Rowe)
- Newsgroups: sci.bio
- Subject: Re: "Falling" Asleep
- Message-ID: <106264@netnews.upenn.edu>
- Date: 22 Jan 93 23:30:35 GMT
- References: <106066@netnews.upenn.edu> <C18q4v.507@iat.holonet.net>
- Sender: news@netnews.upenn.edu
- Organization: University of Pennsylvania
- Lines: 68
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pender.ee.upenn.edu
-
- In article <C18q4v.507@iat.holonet.net> ken@iat.holonet.net
- (Ken Easlon) writes:
-
- >As I understand it, Mickey's view is that the dream head might be at any
- >random orientation, but lines up with the real head upon awakening, giving
- >the illusion that the dream world is at a ninety degree angle with the real
- >world.
-
- That's not really my view. My view (please don't ask what orientation
- this view has :-) is that it doesn't make a lot of sense to talk about
- a dream head having an orientation. I think that, because it seems to
- me that the dream head is an imaginary percept having no relationship
- whatsoever to our external reality.
-
- >My view is that the dream head and real head are always in alignment, and
- >that the 90 degree relationship between the real world and the dream world
- >is actual and not illusory.
- >
- >My primary data for this belief is a lot of experience in a hypnagogic
- >state where I can see dream imagery and real world imagery at the same
- >time, and they are at right angles. There is no sense of shifting head
- >orientation.
-
- And *my* explanation of that was that as you drift back into
- consciousness, your imaginary head lines up with your real head. That
- might sound like a contradiction to my statement that your imaginary
- head doesn't have an orientation, but what I mean by "lining up" is
- that your perceptions of the outside world begin to merge with your
- dream "perceptions". So far as I can tell, your imaginary head still
- has no "orientation", it's just that you have two percepts of your
- body--one coming from your sensors, and the other coming from, perhaps
- your RAS--as you wake up. These two percepts are fused as you wake.
- You similarly have two sets of percepts about your surroundings, and I
- suspect (based in part on your phenomenal descriptions) that these are
- merged by the dissolution of your imaginary surroundings after the
- discrepancy between where you are and where you imagine you are
- becomes clear.
-
- >My backup argument is that conceptual imagery has a top and bottom which is
- >usually aligned with the top and bottom of the head.
-
- If I understand that, I don't agree with it either, but please don't
- follow it up...
-
- >In any event, I think Mickey and I agree that the sense of "down" in dreams
- >is imaginary. This would be consistent with my explanation of Ginzberg's
- >falling sensation as being the normal sleep-time loss of gravity perception
- >at a time before sleep has fully arrived.
-
- It's also consistent with you losing your major source of information
- about which direction is down when you fall asleep. As you lose your
- somatosensory perception you feel as if the bed, floor, chair,
- whatever, is dropping out from under you. That's more in line with
- what *I* experience when I get a falling sensation when I'm on the
- edge of sleep. Does anybody else want to throw in their two cents, or
- am I putting you all to sleep :-)
-
- >As regards concept/dream orientation (the angle of a conceptual or dream
- >image with respect to the head), I'm willing to go on talking about it as
- >long as anybody wants to.
-
- I'm really going to try not to respond, because I don't see us getting
- any where. But then again I've tried to hold back before...
-
- >Ken Easlon
- >ken@holonet.net
-
- Mickey Rowe (rowe@pender.ee.upenn.edu)
-