1 result for (book:sdpc AND heading:"part three chapter 12" AND stemmed:univers)

SDPC Part Three: Chapter 12 5/112 (4%) dream recall locations investigation recorder
– Seth, Dreams and Projections of Consciousness
– © 2011 Laurel Davies-Butts
– Part Three: Exploration of the Interior Universe — Investigation of Dream Reality
– Chapter 12: Dream Recall: How to Remember Your Dreams — Dream Investigation

Exploration of the Interior Universe

[... 6 paragraphs ...]

The interior universe is at least as rich, varied and complicated as the exterior one. Dream reality is only one aspect of this inner universe, in the same way that our planet is only one of many others in a physical sky. Before our experiments began, I used to think that dreams were relatively chaotic productions, with a few subconscious insights thrown in for good measure, now and then — a nightly retreat into idiocy for the tired brain. I considered sleep a small death in which all sense of continuity vanished. Most of the dreams I’d recalled until then had been nightmares — the self gone mad, I thought — so I wasn’t prepared for Seth’s emphasis on the importance of dreams.

[... 5 paragraphs ...]

Records of individual dreams are not enough, nor are studies of the physiological effect of dreaming. Most psychologists would not admit the existence of a definite structured universe in which dream acts, rather than physical acts, happen. Therefore, at this time, they will not consider dreams in this larger context. Seth maintains that we will understand ourselves as dreamers only if we are also aware of the larger environment in which dreams take place, that we interact in the dream state as we do in the waking one and that we form mass dream events as we form physical events on a mass basis.

[... 64 paragraphs ...]

I was fascinated with Seth’s material on the dream universe. “A fantastic theory,” I said to Rob.

[... 16 paragraphs ...]

The ego skims the topmost surface of reality and awareness. This is not the result of any inherent egotistical quality. It is true that the ego’s responsibility is with the relationship between the self and the physical environment. It must necessarily focus within the confines of physical reality. Nevertheless, it is fully capable of perceiving far more than Western man allows it to perceive. Fear, ignorance, and superstition limit its potentials and, therefore, limit even its effectiveness within the physical universe.

[... 15 paragraphs ...]

Similar sessions

SDPC Part Three: Chapter 13 dream electrical rem intensities world
TES6 Session 244 March 23, 1966 Peggy locations photograph envelope switch
TSM Chapter Fourteen dream waking clerks locations Turkish
TES3 Session 123 January 20, 1965 electrical emotions attractions climate independent