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Big dreams are rare but highly memorable dream experiences that make a strong and lasting impact on the dreamer's waking awareness. Such dreams can include vivid imagery, intense emotions, fantastic characters, bizarre elements of form and content, and an uncanny sense of being connected to forces beyond one's ordinary dreaming mind. These types of dreams have played significant roles in religious and cultural history, and even today people still experience them and find them intriguing and thought-provoking. Because of their infrequent occurrence and fantastical tendencies, however, big dreams have rarely been studied in light of modern science. While we know a great deal about the religious manifestations of big dreams through history and around the world, we have not yet integrated that cross-cultural knowledge with new scientific research on their psychological roots in the brain-mind system.In this volume, Kelly Bulkeley provides the first full-scale cognitive scientific analysis of highly memorable dreams, with an original theory about their formation, function, and meaning. He draws upon evidence from religious studies, psychology, anthropology, evolutionary biology, and neuroscience to build a very specific argument: big dreams are a primal wellspring of religious experience. They represent an innate, neurologically hard-wired capacity of our species that regularly provokes greater self-awareness, creativity, and insight into the existential challenges and spiritual potentials of human life.
Kelly Bulkeley is a Visiting Scholar at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, California.
IntroductionSection I. Sleep1. The evolution of sleep2. The brain's paradoxical activities in sleep3. The role of sleep in human health and development4. Cultural practices of sleep through historySection II. Ordinary Dreaming5. Dream recall6. Patterns in form and content7. Continuities between dreaming and waking life8. Discontinuities and metaphorsSection III. Big Dreams9. Aggressive 10. Sexual11. Gravitational12. MysticalSection IV. Religious Experiences13. Demonic attack14. Prophetic vision15. Ritual healing16. Contemplative practiceConclusionAppendix: Word search methods in the study of dreamsIndex
this book offers so many other insights into psychology, neurology and dream content analysis, it is well worth your money.
Kelly Bulkeley, Kelly Bulkeley, Clodagh Weldon, Graduate Theological Union) Bulkeley, Kelly (Visiting Scholar, Visiting Scholar, Dominican University) Weldon, Clodagh (Associate Professor of Theology; Chair of Theology and Pastoral Ministry, Associate Professor of Theology; Chair of Theology and Pastoral Ministry