Dreaming Routledge Library Editions: Sleep and Dreams Series
Originally published in 1959, with some corrections in 1962, the author examines the common view at the time that dreams are mental activities or mental occurrences taking place during sleep. He starts off by offering a proof that the sentence ?I am asleep? is a senseless form of words and cannot express a judgment. After commenting on various features of the concept of sleep, the author expands his argument to prove that the notion of making any judgment at all while asleep is without sense. He takes the further step of showing that this same conclusion holds for all other mental acts and mental occurrences, with the exception of dreams.
Acknowledgements. 1. Introduction 2. Asserting That One is Asleep 3. Judging That One is Asleep 4. A Comparison of ‘I Am Asleep’ and ‘I Am in Pain’ 5. Two Objections 6. The Criteria of Sleep 7. Phenomena Resembling Sleep 8. Sound Asleep 9. Judgments in Sleep 10. Application to Other Mental Phenomena 11. Dreaming as an Exception 12. The Concept of Dreaming 13. Temporal Location and Duration of Dreams 14. A Queer Phenomenon 15. Continuity between Dreams and Waking Life 16. Dreams and Scepticism 17. The Principle of Coherence 18. Do I Know I am Awake? Appendix: Dreams and Psychiatry. Bibliography. Index
Date de parution : 09-2019
13.8x21.6 cm
Date de parution : 09-2017
13.8x21.6 cm
Thème de Dreaming :
Mots-clés :
Complete Primitive Language; Rapid Eye Movements; Dream Recall; Tactual Contents; Queer Phenomenon; Dream Report; Qualified Assertion; Intelligible Sentence; Indicative Sentence; Affirmative Evidence; Psychological Sentences; Hypnotic Trance; Unpleasant Dream; Coherence Principle; Sore Foot; Logical Contraries; Follow; Incline; Holding; Outward Criteria; Dreamless Sleep; Physiological Criterion; Slight Noise; Young Man; Physical Time