Taken from:
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/07/25/reality-a-very-short-introduction/
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(Image from the movie Inception) |
“Contemplating the possibility that you are dreaming right
now is certainly very perplexing. You might think that it is also exceedingly
unlikely, something in the same ballpark as hitting the jackpot in a lottery or
suddenly dropping dead. There are various things that are theoretically
possible, even though their probability is very low (such as a monkey randomly
hitting on a typewriter writing out the complete works of Shakespeare, or the
sudden disappearance of objets to to an effect called ‘quantum tunnelling’). If
you don’t worry that this book might suddenly disappear from your hand due to
some bizarre quantum effect, why worry that you might be dreaming right now?
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(Image from the movie Inception) |
The reason why you should worry is that the chances of you
dreaming at this very moment are far, far greater. Let’s do a quick
calculation. We optimistically assume that you get eight hours of sleep a
night, which leaves sixteen hours during which you are awake. Sleep researchers
have found out that there is a strong correlation between dreaming and being in
so-called REM (rapid eye movement) sleep. REM sleep is characterized by rapid
movement of the eyeballs; the brain is highly active, its electric activity
resembles that of a waking brain, but the sleeper is more difficult to wake
than during slow-wave or non-REM sleep. We know that between 2-% and 25% of our
sleep is REM sleep. Taking the lower value and assuming that you always and
only dream during REM sleep, this gives us 1.6 hours of dreaming ever night. As
there are therefore 1.6 hours of dream consciousness for every 16 hours of
waking consciousness, this means that your chance of dreaming at any given
moment is 1 in 10. This quite a high probability — for comparison: the chance
of winning the jackpot of a typical lottery is about 1 in 14 millions (this
means that if you bought a ticket every week, you will have one win on average
every 250,000 years); the chance of the author of this book dying in an
accident within the next year is somewhat less than 1 in 2,500.
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(Image from the movie Inception) |
So there is a significant chance of you dreaming right now.
But does it matter? To be sure, we can’t exclude the possibility that this is
all a dream, but as long as it continues, it will not make the slightest
difference to how we lead our lives. Even if the £5 note in my pocket is just
dream-money, and the strawberry cake I but with it is only a dream-cake, I can
still have the sensation of eating the strawberry cake as a result, and what
more can I want? Even if I am dreaming right now, I will still be able to plan
my life, cause will follow effect, and actions will have consequences. Of
course, these consequences will just be dream-consequences, but given that we
have assumed earlier that I would not be able to tell ‘from the inside’ whether
I am dreaming or not, why should I worry about this? The world of experiences
is still the same, and this is all that counts, after all.”
~ Jan Westerhoff, In
Reality: A Very Short Introduction
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