How does our subconscious come to real existing spaces?

For example, if we live in an apartment for 20 years and have had many dreams in which experiences from our living room were processed.

For example, have we had 1000 dreams where our living room plays a role, like:

  • 100 dreams took place right in our living room
  • 900 Dreams were variations of our living room, but they were rooms for different purposes such as departments in a company, school classrooms, other apartments, etc.

For example, our apartment is in Cologne and we dreamed of a version of our living room that is located in an apartment in Berlin.

But if this exact apartment, with this exact living room, actually existed, exists, or will exist in Berlin, how does our subconscious in this example come to think of this exact apartment, even if we've never been there in our lives and have never seen anything of it? So, in this example, we dream of strange apartments that could actually exist somewhere in real life, even if we never actually enter the apartments in question.

What do you think and what are your experiences?

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Still
11 months ago

Since furniture and spaces cannot be all too individually furnished, the probability that somewhere a room you dream about does not exist small.

Peppie85
11 months ago

That’s Billshut. I think man is a true master in recognising patterns, and just dreams are something we only remember vaguely. So it can be that an apartment we have dreamed of, and one we have never seen, have some similarities, and ZACK! strikes the brain and builds up where there were no bones.

Lg, Anna

Littlethought
11 months ago

The thinking of man takes place about the language. In sleep, however, the cerebral cortex and with it the language center is not active. Man cannot therefore grasp the brain activity linguistically and therefore not store it linguistically. But the brain is not inactive in sleep. It tries to arrange the experiences of the day as associations and to link them with past experiences in order to identify hidden connections in this way. This happens all at a non-language level and therefore the connections are not logical. When awakening, the cerebellum tries to make a coherent story from the relics of the nightly brain activity. This is only relatively imperfect and therefore our dreams are so bizarre and fairytale. The dream is therefore an attempt to interpret the cerebral cortex with regard to the diffuse perception of the dream relics when awakening.

Something overspirated (after the brain researcher Martin Korte):

In our dreams we remember something we have not experienced at all.