I've definitely had these dreams they seem quite real and the strangest thing is the progression in each timline. Every time I dream the lives in those various realities have moved forward in a very natural progression.
There's an old television series named "Sliders" you may enjoy. Its about a group of people who ended up in parallel/ alternate worlds due to an experiment and are trying to get back home. Each time they slide into a new earth, the changes there might be minute, such as the colour of the golden gate bridge being blue instead of red. Or a timeline where penicillin wasn't invented yet. Then they visited a world where the dinosaurs never went extinct or one in which the USA remained a British Colony.
Perhaps the show writers were doing some travelling of their own during their dreams.....
One of the worlds I've dreamed/ visited is quite similar to Philip. K. Dicks " Man in the High Castle" Perhaps we went to the same timeline? Others are more fantasy and some really quite similar to our own. Another one I've just recalled as I haven't really thought about it until your video is a world where the Soviets won the Cold War!
Perhaps I should be a sci-fi writer hahaha. But obviously I take everything with a pinch of salt, dreams most likely are just dreams. But it's the feeling of reality and the other timelines progression that mystifies me. Perhaps our brains our much more powerful than we realise, then there's the power of suggestion such as reading books, watching movies they all may influence what we dream about on a subconscious level.
Btw I'd also love to hear of other people's experiences!
Yes, definite write an SF novel! It might become a Netflix series! I think we can say with confidence that our minds / brains are more powerful than we realize. In fact, I would recommend reading up on the science of memetics, from "memes" coined by Richard Dawkins in his 1976 book The Selfish Gene. I contend this will blow apart the "soft" science of psychology and bring us a "hard" science of the mind. Memetics shows that our world and reality is shaped by memes (in the Richard Dawkins' sense). Psychology rambles on and on with nothing solid. Whereas memetics gets right to it.
I've definitely had these dreams they seem quite real and the strangest thing is the progression in each timline. Every time I dream the lives in those various realities have moved forward in a very natural progression.
There's an old television series named "Sliders" you may enjoy. Its about a group of people who ended up in parallel/ alternate worlds due to an experiment and are trying to get back home. Each time they slide into a new earth, the changes there might be minute, such as the colour of the golden gate bridge being blue instead of red. Or a timeline where penicillin wasn't invented yet. Then they visited a world where the dinosaurs never went extinct or one in which the USA remained a British Colony.
Perhaps the show writers were doing some travelling of their own during their dreams.....
One of the worlds I've dreamed/ visited is quite similar to Philip. K. Dicks " Man in the High Castle" Perhaps we went to the same timeline? Others are more fantasy and some really quite similar to our own. Another one I've just recalled as I haven't really thought about it until your video is a world where the Soviets won the Cold War!
Perhaps I should be a sci-fi writer hahaha. But obviously I take everything with a pinch of salt, dreams most likely are just dreams. But it's the feeling of reality and the other timelines progression that mystifies me. Perhaps our brains our much more powerful than we realise, then there's the power of suggestion such as reading books, watching movies they all may influence what we dream about on a subconscious level.
Btw I'd also love to hear of other people's experiences!
Nice video once again!
Yes, definite write an SF novel! It might become a Netflix series! I think we can say with confidence that our minds / brains are more powerful than we realize. In fact, I would recommend reading up on the science of memetics, from "memes" coined by Richard Dawkins in his 1976 book The Selfish Gene. I contend this will blow apart the "soft" science of psychology and bring us a "hard" science of the mind. Memetics shows that our world and reality is shaped by memes (in the Richard Dawkins' sense). Psychology rambles on and on with nothing solid. Whereas memetics gets right to it.