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Dreaming Reality

How Neuroscience and Mysticism Can Unlock the Secrets of Consciousness

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A cutting-edge neuroscientist and a leading clinical psychologist look to religious, mystical, and mind-altering experiences to challenge scientific orthodoxies concerning consciousness.

We are nothing but a pack of neurons, Francis Crick once said. Vladimir Miskovic and Steven Jay Lynn show that this way of thinking is both limited and an obstacle to understanding consciousness. In Dreaming Reality, Miskovic and Lynn connect the latest findings from neuroscience―which studies the brain from the outside in, as a purely physical object―to the insights of the world’s mystical traditions, which chart elaborate cartographies of the mind from inside out through experiences of meditation, prayer, and ecstasy. We can tackle the biggest questions surrounding the nature of consciousness when we place objective scientific research alongside the phenomenology of “altered” states.

Dreaming Reality offers a rich synthesis of brains and minds, new and old, that challenges many cherished notions of how we experience our worlds and selves. Instead of privileging the experience of waking life, Miskovic and Lynn take this only as the starting point of a progressive disentanglement of consciousness. Delving into Buddhism, Vedanta, and Christian mysticism, they find that we have much to learn from dreams, hallucinations, visionary states, ego death, mind wandering, sensory deprivation, psychedelic experimentation, meditation, and minimal phenomenal experiences of consciousness.

Each chapter brings us closer to understanding how we dream reality into existence and how we might transcend impoverished materialist models, whose unacknowledged effect is to drive us toward nihilism. Instead, we arrive at a model of consciousness that is more capacious and compassionate than biological sciences alone can imagine.

©2025 Vladimir Miskovic and Steven Jay Lynn (P)2025 Dreamscape Media
Bouddhisme Psychologie Psychologie et santé mentale Science Sciences biologiques Cerveau humain Conscience Méditation Tradition
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I'm skeptical about the value of ketamine as a psychedelic, as I hear it's a highly addictive painkiller. I also worry some people will spend too long practicing not thinking about anything, as a form of meditation, when they may find more success contemplating solutions to challenging problems and pondering moral mysteries. I do, however, think that clearing one's mind is a great way to deal with burnout and help ground oneself in a world that has alienated us from our true nature for so long. This also appears to be a more profound type of meditation.

Elaborates on concepts previously introduced to me regarding ontological mathematics. Very valuable information on psychedelics.

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