Art by smbc-comics

Consciousness is often said to disappear in deep, dreamless sleep. We argue that this assumption is oversimplified. Unless dreamless sleep is defined as unconscious from the outset there are good empirical and theoretical reasons for saying that a range of different types of sleep experience, some of which are distinct from dreaming, can occur in all stages of sleep.

Pubmed Articles

Does Consciousness Disappear in Dreamless Sleep?

Sciencealert Article We Were Wrong About Consciousness Disappearing in Dreamless Sleep, Say Scientists

  • LanternEverywhere@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Sleep is NOTHING like death. You’re still experiencing lots of stuff, you still very much have a sense of self, you’re still thinking things, your brain is still processing lots of information.

    General anesthesia - now THAT is a real close period to what being dead is.

    • Lorindól@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      I’ve had general anesthesia, it was just like falling into a deep, dreamless sleep.

      If death is like that, then there’s absolutely nothing to be afraid of.

      • Vigge93@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Probably is. If they gave you a little too much anesthesia so you didn’t wake up, you would probably drift off the same, and then just not wake up.

        • Rambi@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          But that has already happened, of course you don’t fear something that has already occurred. People only fear what is yet to occur

        • thonofpy@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I do mind now. I’m quite bummed out about missing all the fun of the 20th century. And never getting to breathe truly clean air. Or having the athlete body of a gatherer. Messing around in trees with feet that can actually grip something.

      • BastingChemina@slrpnk.net
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        1 year ago

        For me when I had anesthesia I quickly closed my eyes with the surgeon talking, when I opened my eyes the surgeon was still talking so I was wondering when the surgery would start.

        Of course when I opened my eyes it was 5 hours later and after the surgery but it took me a while to realized that.

        • PixxlMan@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          It’s pretty cool that you could just continue your thought after basically pausing your brain for five hours. Kind of like hibernation for a pc I guess.

      • DefederateLemmyMl@feddit.nl
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        1 year ago

        I’ve had general anesthesia, it was just like falling into a deep, dreamless sleep.

        What if anesthesia actually just blocks your memories and physical reactions, but you actually experience everything that happens to you in absolute terror?

        • CeeBee@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          What if anesthesia actually just blocks your memories and physical reactions, but you actually experience everything that happens to you in absolute terror?

          Latest studies with FMRIs and other tools have found that general anesthesia decouples the sections of the brain from each other. All the various parts of the brain stop communicating. It’s an entities different state than sleep based on the brain activity.

          Normally when we have various stimuli or are asleep, neural activity “flows” around from one section to the other. When under general anesthesia those flows are isolated and don’t connect to other sections of the brain.

          This has actually given us a huge clue as to where consciousness comes from and what makes it a thing.

          It also helps explain why going under is just lights out and no drama or anything. It’s like an off switch for the “person”.

        • kevinBLT@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Thats exactly what some do, depends on the anesthetic, but it doesn’t matter because if a memory never forms it may as well not have happened.

          • DefederateLemmyMl@feddit.nl
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            1 year ago

            if a memory never forms it may as well not have happened

            That is an interesting philosophical question.

            If suffering is not remembered, was there even suffering? And if there was, does it matter? I can think of a few counterexamples of that, for example: a killer who tortures his victim before killing them.

            • pinkdrunkenelephants@sopuli.xyz
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              1 year ago

              Uhh, yes and yes? What’s stopping a rapist from anesthesizing their victims before the act and using the fact that they did as an excuse to get off charges under your logic?

              • jarfil@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Physical abuse tends to leave some physical consequences. You’d have to come up with an example where there would be neither physical not psychological consequences… but even getting anesthesized against one’s will is already a consequence.

                • pinkdrunkenelephants@sopuli.xyz
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                  1 year ago

                  No it doesn’t, not always. Actually it’s routine for medical students to be brought in to give anesthesitized women pelvic exams without their knowledge and consent, and no one was the wiser until universities that did this announced it… https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/17/health/pelvic-medical-exam-unconscious.html

                  That is textbook rape right there, and it doesn’t often have physical consequences. Most women didn’t even know but doctors fucking did it anyway.

                  How you people have any faith in any aspect of society is beyond me.

                  EDIT: And now I’m being downvoted over it. Imagine being downvoted for pointing out rape occurs during surgical procedures, a well-established fact. Think about the implications of that

            • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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              1 year ago

              Presumably in your scenario the victim remembers the torture though.

              In the case of general anaesthetic the memory is effectively considered to be deleted in real time. On its way through the brain it ceases to exist so it never reaches the conscious mind.

          • jarfil@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            There was a case of a guy, where they botched the anesthesia, and he was just paralyzed but conscious the whole time during some invasive surgery. They realized their mistake, and tried to fix it by giving him some amnesic so he wouldn’t retain the memories.

            After getting discharged, he wouldn’t remember anything… but kept having nightmares, and a few weeks later took his own life.

            So it seems like memories don’t need to be fully formed to mess one up.

            • kevinBLT@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              That sounds like the mechanism might be different though, but yeah some percentage of people wake up during surgery while the paralytic is still in effect, they closely monitor the heart rate for sudden spikes because of this I believe. It sounds horrifying to me, but then I remember that there was a time when anesthetics didn’t exist.

        • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I had to be put under a few years ago to extract wisdom teeth and I wouldn’t say I was 100% gone. I remember seeing the light through my eyelids, hearing muffled unintelligible voices, and feeling mild tension as they worked in my mouth, jostling my head around. No pain, but notable light sensations. It also felt like it was over in a minute for an hour and a half procedure. Was definitely a wild experience, but certainly no terror remembered, thankfully.

      • PixxlMan@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I’m genuinely surprised that the idea that something bad might happen to you when you’re dead or that it could be painful etc is anywhere near as prevalent as it is. To me, that makes absolutely no sense. Of course dying might be painful… But death? Once you brain no longer works? Feels obvious to me that you won’t feel, well, anything. The thing that frightens me about death wouldn’t be the experience of being dead, but rather not being able to do any more things and not existing anymore.

        • Anamnesis@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          This reasoning goes all the way back to Epicurus. With regard to your latter points, Epicurus thought they were also solved by being dead. For someone to miss out on something, they have to exist in the first place. No person, no missing out. And for not existing to be bad, a person must be around to be upset about it.

        • ezures@lemmy.wtf
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          1 year ago

          The most scary stuff is just not doing or experiencing anything after death, at least for me. (Probably the biggest fomo on earth)

          • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            Life is a series of missed opportunities. When you choose to do something, you miss out on a multitude of other options. That is fine.

            But I get the FOMO, it took me a few years of active mindfulness to reign it in.

          • BigNote@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            It’s not rational. Evolution has hardwired us and every other organism that has the necessary neural architecture to fear death and seek to avoid it. A species that didn’t have an instinctive and heritable aversion to death would not last very long.

              • BigNote@lemm.ee
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                1 year ago

                Describe your “aversion” to death any way you want to, if in the end it results in something that very much looks like fear, I think you’re making a distinction without a difference.

      • zeppo@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        What’s hard for me to accept is the idea of never waking up. It seems like it has to end sometime.

        • jdsquared@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          See for me I’m not sure why that’s hard to accept. I think I first heard it from Alan Watts, that there were billions of years of space before I was conscious, so why am I afraid of billions of years of nothing after I’m gone?

          • aberrate_junior_beatnik@midwest.social
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            1 year ago

            Not having something in the first place and losing something you have are two different things. It’s like saying to someone who just lost their partner “don’t feel bad, for the first n years of your life you didn’t have a partner and you were fine”

            Additionally, it’s not billions of years of nothing. It’s an eternity of nothing. Billions of years may as well be the blink of an eye relative to eternity.

            God, I’m getting anxious just talking about it.

          • zeppo@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I didn’t say i was afraid of it, just that it seemed unlikely. The billions before you were conscious ended somehow, right?

    • Anamnesis@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      When I’m asleep I’m not experiencing shit. Close eyes, moment of black, awake again the next day.

    • brygphilomena@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      For a long time, mine was dreamless. It wasn’t until I turned off the TV before going to bed that I started to have dreams. I theorize that the external stimuli hindered my brain from creating dreams.

      It was a super weird period because my dreams started as nightmares, like my brain didn’t know what the hell was going on. Then I drifted through a period of recurring dreams and then lucid dreams. They’ve settled down into more normal dreams, but I’m still super excited to dream each and every night. It feels like I found music after being deaf or seeing colors for the first time after being blind.

      • FaceDeer@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        It wasn’t dreamless, you just weren’t remembering your dreams. If your sleep was truly dreamless for a lengthy period of time you’d be dead.

        Often simply changing your sleeping habits in any significant way is enough to get you to start remembering dreams. That’s because you need to wake up “unexpectedly” in the middle of a REM sleep phase to have a chance to form memories of them. Normally your brain has its memory-forming mechanism disengaged during REM sleep because there’s no good reason to remember that stuff - it’s just a side effect of a mental housekeeping routine.

        You can also “train” yourself to remember dreams more often, to some degree, by trying to record a dream journal or otherwise forcing your brain to lay down some memories of those dreams the moment you wake up and they’re still present in your short-term memory.

        • odbol@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          You’re not supposed to remember your dreams. When you remember your dreams it’s when you were woken unexpectedly, or when you consciously or unconsciously fled the dream before returning it to the Dreammaster.

          We only borrow our dreams from him every night, but when we leave a dream prematurely we are stealing that dream - bringing it into our reality and hiding it away in our memories.

          However precious or horrid your stolen dreams may be, remember that the Dreammaster will claim them back from you. He always does, in the end.

        • newIdentity@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          Well usually you wake up after each dream circle. You just don’t remember it because you fall asleep almost instantly. That really was a problem when my father would wake me up in the morning and I couldn’t remember him waking me up and slept for another half an hour)

          Then I started with a dream journal. I don’t do it anymore because I’m lazy, but I still remember waking up multiple times a night and remembering exactly what I just dreamed and notice the memory fading away.

          When I journaled my dreams were extremely vivid. It isn’t like this anymore but I still sometimes have lucid dreams even though I can’t really stabilize and control them.

    • Zorque@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      The majority of sleep is dreamless, I believe it’s just during REM that you dream, which I believe is usually 15-20% of normal sleep.

    • CeeBee@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Technically, if you remember a dream it’s because you woke up during a REM cycle. If your sleep cycle completes fully, then you won’t remember your dream and will feel more rested.

      • God@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        I think this is false but I don’t have information to refute it other than my own experience. I used to write a dream diary. When I did, I remembered my dreams almost every time I woke up. Not just half the time or 80% but more like 96% of the time. And it was very detailed with multiple dreams tied to each other.

        • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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          1 year ago

          I remember I’ve had dreams but I only have a very vague sense of what they are about.

          • treefrog@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            Also kept a dream journal.

            The trick is not to focus on the story (what the dream is about or means) and to recall the emotional energy in the dream.

            Learning to meditate and tune into my emotions was both aided by dream journaling, and an aid to dream journaling.

            Plus the emotional content probably has more meaning than whatever story we tell ourselves.

            • lyam23@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Agreed. In my experience, dreams can be interpreted much like art can be interpreted. How you emotionally respond to the images and scenarios tells you a lot about what your mind is attempting to deal with while you are physically safe. I believe that dreams are a form of poetry that your mind is engaged with in order to integrate life experiences in a safe manner.

        • treefrog@lemm.ee
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          I kept a dream journal for a couple of years.

          Subjectively there was no way for me to know if it was memory or just my tired brain making a story out of the left over bits of sleep.

          It did fuel a lot of creative writing though (both in and out of the journal). And helped me be more in touch with my emotions.

        • CeeBee@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I think this is false

          It’s not false. I remember my dreams every morning, and often remember them for a long time. I also have sleep issues and never get restful sleep.

          There’s naturally far more nuanced to the neuroscience, but it’s largely true.

  • severien@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    It’s pretty terrifying when you think about it, yet completely normalized.

    My pet peeve regarding all these discussions is that we throw around “consciousness”, but we have no good definition for it …

    • duckington@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I mean to be honest I wouldn’t say that we “die” at all when you sleep… your mind is extremely active while sleeping, it’s just disconnected from motor control.

      • enkers@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        it’s just disconnected from motor control.

        It’s way more than just that, though. You’re also disconnected from your sensory inputs, and furthermore, your conscious experience is interrupted. It’s not like you’re just in a sensory deprivation tank, because there you’d still experience conscious thought, and the passage of time. It just seems to turn off for a while.

        • FaceDeer@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Plus there are periods of deep sleep when your brain does shut down quite thoroughly. People just don’t remember those, obviously, so they put a lot more weight on the dreaming bits that slip through sometimes.

      • pjhenry1216@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I mean, without defining what the self is and consciousness, it’s difficult to even define what death is from a consciousness point of view. A living meat bag doesn’t require brain activity either. There’s a whole range of things. So even assuming we have a good meaning of “death” is oversimplifying things.

        • jarfil@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          We have a good definition of “death”, it’s the irreversible stop of some activity. For a brain, that’s neuronal depolarization; for a body organ or cell, it’s destruction past its ability to regenerate.

          The self, is a snapshot of a brain state at a certain moment, which is technically irreversibly disappearing 30 times a second, but we like to think of it as just “changing” and forming a causal sequence we call “consciousness”.

          • pjhenry1216@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            it’s the irreversible stop of some activity.

            This threshold has changed over time. So I don’t think it’s a good definition of it hasn’t always been the same point.

            And the rest of your comment is just philosophy. You’re neither wrong nor right. Definition of self is not a concept there’s really any consensus over.

            • jarfil@lemmy.world
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              Threshold has changed, the definition is still the same, we’re just getting better at reverting the stop of some activities, like breathing or heartbeat. If we someday could revert neuronal depolarization, that would be great, but it seems difficult to achieve.

              The other part is not just philosophy, it’s the best we can do to define a “self”. The philosophical part is only whether we can consider them a continuum, or whether we have to see them as usually similar but separate (there are reasons to support both versions).

              • pjhenry1216@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                If the threshold changed, the actual definition changed. The same words to describe a different point. If the definition described two different things, its changed. That’s basic and simple reasoning. If a definition no longer describes the same thing, it’s because it’s actual meaning has changed.

                • jarfil@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  “To the end of the road” doesn’t change meanings when the road gets extended another 10 miles. The point changes, the definition doesn’t.

    • TwilightVulpine@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It’s terrifying at first, but if you reflect over it further it becomes natural. Sure, we can’t guarantee that we are the same continuous individual, but “not sleeping” would only see us have a more profound and permanent discontinuity. It’s not a possibility for us. Still, we do carry something of the people we used to be regardless. Consciousness vanishes and recreates itself, as do most of our cells. We are evolving entities, as is everyone around us.

      This existential fear is rooted on a desire for permanence that we never had to begin with. There was never a fixed self that we could possibly know.

    • NewNewAccount@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      What sort of definition of consciousness are you looking for? I’m sure there are dozens of “good” definitions of consciousness.

      • pjhenry1216@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        That there are more than one definition is kind of the problem. And that you’d characterize any of them as “good” sounds more like a euphemism for “good enough for a particular scenario.”

  • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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    A human being is a process of computation. Ending the computation is death. Pausing the computation is, well, simply pausing the computation. It has no profound significance.

    (This is also my answer to the “teleporter problem.” As long as the computation continues, a change in the substrate on which it takes place also has no profound significance.)

    • query@lemmy.world
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      And if the teleportation process doesn’t terminate the original, but creates a copy on the other end, are they both the same person?

      • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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        Creating and destroying perfectly identical copies of the information that corresponds to a person neither creates nor destroys people unless the very last copy of that information is destroyed, in which case the person is killed.

        Small divergences aren’t a big deal. For example, if a person spends an hour under the effect of an anesthetic (or alcohol) which prevents the formation of new long-term memories, this person isn’t dying when he goes to sleep and wakes up without any memories of that last hour.

        Larger divergences are a big deal - losing a year of memories is pretty bad, losing a decade is even worse, and having one’s mind returned to the blank slate of an infant is very close to the same thing as dying.

        So what I’m saying is that the two copies start out as the same person and then gradually become different people.

        • Anduin1357@lemmy.world
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          I would argue that two disconnected copies of the information that corresponds to a person does make 2 disjoint persons.

          Like running a different seed on procedural generation, entropy will ensure that these two identical persons won’t be identical after whatever ticks in the biological clock.

          • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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            I agree that the copies will diverge almost instantly; I’m just saying that small amounts of divergence aren’t a big deal. That’s what I’m trying to illustrate with my example of the person who loses an hour of memories. I think this is exactly equivalent to making a copy, having that copy exist for an hour, and then destroying it. An hour of memories does make the copy different from the original, but the loss of the copy is just the loss of that hour, not of a complete human being (and we naturally quickly forget much more than that - I already can’t remember what I did every hour yesterday).

            I admit I don’t feel like it’s exactly equivalent, but I think that’s an illusion caused by my moral intuitions developing in a wold where destroying a copy always means destroying the only copy.

            • Anduin1357@lemmy.world
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              Though the simpler solution is that perhaps memory formation is paused over the period then the person ‘lost’ their memory to sleep.

              Losing memories when you’re wide awake is like a file system deleting pointers to a file. The file is still there, just inaccessible.

              Anyways I feel that the assertion that “Creating and destroying perfectly identical copies of the information that corresponds to a person neither creates nor destroys people” is extremely dangerous thinking that could lead to the premature end of consciousness for some very unfortunate individuals. After all, they’re perfectly identical and we have no documented instance of anyone sharing consciousness, so it may be that consciousness are unique and not commutative.

      • jarfil@lemmy.world
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        If it creates a copy, then it isn’t teleportation, it’s copying. Two copies will diverge from the moment they’re no longer a single copy.

    • Ech@lemm.ee
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      a change in the substrate on which it takes place also has no profound significance.

      It does to the person being “deleted”.

      • massive_bereavement@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        SOMA is one of my favorite gaming experiences and probably one of the best sci-fi stories in this medium.

        Saddly some monster bits were a bit weaker and I think Amnesia fans felt it didn’t match their expectations…

    • NegativeInf@lemmy.world
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      It feels like dreaming is the “training from a batch of sample memories” tactic from deep learning.

  • paddirn@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Death is ‘Long Death’, Sleep is ‘Short Death’, and Naps are ‘Power Death’.

  • popemichael@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    I mean, I lucid dream every night. So my consciousness is rarely off.

    I’ve been practicing for almost 20 years to be able to switch it on and off so its kinda nice that I get to be a god 6 to 8 hours a day

      • popemichael@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 year ago

        I love it. Things can go from psychedelic to me flying in the air, changing the landscape like I’m some sort of God.

        I can even make food and banquets appear, and I can eat whatever I want at full flavor

        I can even make any sexual fantasy I want come true instantly. I don’t do this often, though. As I think it would destroy me in the waking world.

        For the most part, it was worth the years of work it took to learn the meditation needed for all of this.

        • Apinae@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 year ago

          Amazing. Thanks for the insight. Got any links people would find useful if they wanted to follow in your footsteps?

          • popemichael@lemmy.sdf.org
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            1 year ago

            I can’t reccomend books outside of the basics of meditation. Most of it requires some work to be put in with body mindfulness.

            Next time you are about to fall asleep, try to program your brain to find out something that’s meaningful to you. Just keep telling yourself that you are going to find that thing. And when you do, you will KNOW it’s a dream. Keep telling yourself to test reality in your dreams.

            Its ALL about breaking the waking and the non waking barriers

            It will take time to master those powers and the night that you do you will wake up like you just took LSD. Even still, keep that dream object and reality testing in mind. The more you do the more you will find yourself testing if it’s a dream in the dream. That will set it off.

            You can even test if you are in a dream IRL a few time a day to speed things up. It sounds silly to do, but it will train your mind to test reality in dreams.

      • popemichael@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 year ago

        I have a doctorate in philosophy, if that counts.

        I’m sorry that you’re so closed-minded to things like this.

          • L'unico Dee@feddit.it
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            1 year ago

            Yo I’m giving up too, I know it’s hard but, as guy said to me:

            How can we expect to get lucid at night when we’re going through our waking lives in auto-pilot? If we practice being here and now and being aware of the nature of our reality, that mindset will sooner or later be a part of our lives, both waking and dreaming.

            Awareness in waking life is necessary for Lucid Dreams

  • HughJanus@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    When people ask me what happens when you die, I say:

    “Remember what it was like before you were born? Well it’s a lot like that.”

  • z500@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Me: Sleep, how I loathe those little slices of death.

    Also me: watches 2 hours of unnarrated sleeper train travel videos on YouTube

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