FAMOUS
DREAMERS AND THEIR DREAMS
Dreams
have long fascinated humankind since the beginning
of time. With the coming and going of each generation
of man, many speculations have been made to
account for their presence. Dreams may be visits
from an internal, mystical source. They could
be wanderings of the dreamer's soul. Perhaps
they are the reworking of the subconscious to
resolve emotional tensions from the preceding
day. They could be a shift in dimensional planes
enabling the dreamer to peer into the future.
Perhaps all of these ideas are true.
Dreams
have had a dramatic influence on almost every
important aspect of our culture and history.
Dream images have expanded our artistic, musical
and literary horizons, spurred generals to conquer
empires, and led to inventions and industrial
developments that have revolutionized science
and society. Dreams have also given us a basis
for believing that there is a nonmaterial component
to our existence, as well as a continuity of
existence that is not interrupted by physical
death.
Throughout
history, there have been experts who profess
to make sense of these nocturnal images that
creep into the minds of slumbering men. The
ancient grecians had the early philosophers
to interpret the visions of the night. They
wrestled early on with the question of which
was the most real -- the waking state reality
or dreaming reality? Socrates, who lived in
the fourth century B.C., was described in Plato's
Theaetetus as engaging in a lively intellectual
discussion with Theaetetus. Socrates puts forth
the question "What proof could you give
if anyone should ask us now, at the present
moment, whether we are asleep and our thoughts
are a dream, or whether we are awake and talking
to each other in a waking condition?"
Theaetetus was not able to come up with any
satisfactory proof that they were awake and
acknowledged that they could both be dreaming.
The issue was addressed more personally a century
later by the Chinese philosopher Chuang-tzu.
He dreamed that he was a very happy butterfly
who flew around quite pleased about himself.
He suddenly awoke and pondered the question
of whether he was a man dreaming he was a butterfly
or a butterfly dreaming he was man.
Other
famous dreamers throughout history who used
their dreams creatively:
Aristotle,
philosopher
Schopenhauer, philosopher
Sigmund Freud, psychiatrist
Carl Jung, Psychologist
Joseph, Jacob, Daniel and Nebuchadnezzar from
the Bible
Albert Einstein, inventor
Leonardo DeVinci, artist, composer, inventor
Joan of Arc, visionary
Billy Joel, musician, song writer
Paul McCartney, musician, song writer
Inspirational
dreams of the famous have no doubt been responsible
for shaping and molding our history, touching
our hearts and minds. How different the world
might be if the dreamers had not acted upon
the messages given to them in their dreams.
One would ask whether these individuals were
special or gifted to begin with. Perhaps they
were given an extra portion of ingenuity or
spiritual inspiration. Perhaps the dream state
provided them with direct access to vast reservoirs
of creativity. But then maybe they were not
just exceptional dreamers. Perhaps they became
special because of what they did with
their dreams. Acknowledge these great minds
from the past as sources of incredible power
and thought but also realize that the greatest
of creations have yet to be dreamed of or realized
in our world today. Go back to Dreams.
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