The Abyss and Revelation // Philosophy of Dreams

@newton666 · 2025-09-17 20:47 · Freewriters

moon-8915326_1280.png Pixabay

Dreams have always been this strange space between what's real and what's not, where your mind just wanders, swaying and changing from who you are. Some thinkers like Heraclitus and Plato thought it was a way to get to the real thing, but people like Descartes used it to cast doubt on what we can actually feel and sense in a dream.
Time becomes unstable, logic goes out the window, and the person is thrown into a story that doesn't engage them, but that really gets in their head, since dreams aren't just about biology; they're also about what's deeper, what exists, what shows that it's what's deeper, what shows that it's what isn't, the sense that what's solid. Think that it is.
From an existential perspective, dreams are like a shadowy reflection of our desires, fears, and past memories. Freud thought it was just a shadow of the unconscious mind, but Jung believed it was like a universal language for the collective soul. When we sleep, it's as if we're tapping into this kind of gut-level, emotional map that helps us get at the things we shouldn't think about when we're awake.
The dreamer isn't just looking from the sidelines; they're actually exploring these deep, symbolic worlds, where each dream image might unlock the mystery of what it means to exist.
Finally, the philosophy of dreams makes us question what is real and what is just a trick of the mind. What distinguishes a lucid dream from a mystical experience? Where does the real person end and symbolic things begin? In this crazy, busy world filled with constant distractions and simulacra, sleep still maintains its power as a place to rewind, invent things, and discover truths.
#freewrite #writing #philosophy #story #life #neoxian #waivio
Payout: 0.000 HBD
Votes: 19
More interactions (upvote, reblog, reply) coming soon.