Climate Change Robs Family Of Life...
ChatterBank9 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by sophie_1003. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.yes of course, There is evidence that some dreams only take a fraction of the time to be dreamed that they appear to or may even be dreamed in retrospect. Thus the sound of a fire engine might introduce a fire engine into the dream. You might perceive the dream as lasting for (say) an hour but in reality it can't have done as the fire engine would only take seconds to pass your house.
Similarly, the "bump" that wakes you in a falling dream is caused as I recall by a myoclonic jerk sort of a whole body twitch which only lasts a fraction of a second and the brain constructs a back story of a falling dream to account for the sensation. That's the theory anyway.
have a look here
http://www.discovery.com/area/skinnyon/skinnyon971114/skinnyon.html
It was Karl Popper! I'm going back a few years but I think it went something like ...
He stated that the true test of a theory is that is cannot be falsified. For instance, if I state that all swans are white then seeing a white swan does not confirm that the theory is correct. However, If I saw a black swan then I can falsify the theory and prove it incorrect.
I suppose, therefore, that you could postulate the theory that if you are dreaming and falling you will die if you don't wake up and that it will hold true until someone has a dream, is falling, hits the bottom and lives!
Or something like that!
doing philosophy at the moment - doing an essay on Karl Poppers falsification theory!
he doesnt seem to recognise confirmation of a theory though. popper claims it is rational to accept a theory not shown to be false, but what if a theory has not one successful confirmation to its credit?
ive heard about the theory of falling while asleep, and if you hit the ground youre a dead man but i dont suppose there are many people to prove this correct!