Biology, asked by suchana02, 1 year ago

Do we actually see things with our eyes while dreamimg?

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1
Hey there!!

We see thing when light is reflected from one object to our eye.

When we sleep our eyes are closed then.so whatever we see or dream then it's an illusion by our mind.

Hope it helps!
Answered by Albert01
4
@m@n
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hi freind
here is your answer

Our mind genuinely 'sees' some thing we see, eyes are simply receptors for vision. If we cut the connection between eyes and visible cortex in mind, or if there's harm to visual cortex in mind, a person could be blind regardless of having without doubt common eyes!.

These dream visions originate either within the visible centers within the mind or within the latent recollections dwelling within the brain which in flip stimulate the visual cortex.In the course of goals, the subtle physique detaches from the bodily physique and sojourns into the corresponding valuable and intellectual worlds, all the while relaying a transcription of the subtle world experience to the brain. It's this transcription which we denote as a dream.Whilst you wake up it is a variety of interpretation of your dream which you consider. It is vitally not often that one is mindful at the time the experience happens and mindful of the experience as it really is. For that one have got to be very wakeful for the period of the night time, quite conscious in one's sleep. Most commonly this is not the case. There may be one part of the being which has an experience; when that part of the being which had long gone out of the physique re-enters it, brings again the expertise, the brain receives a contact with this experience, translates it by pictures, phrases, recommendations, impressions, feelings, and when one wakes up one catches some thing of this, and with that makes a dream But it's only a transcription of some thing that has occurred which has an analogy, a similarity, but which was not precisely what one receives as a dream.
The cerebral transcription of the events of the night time is commonly warped to such an extent that phenomena are perceived as the reverse of what they particularly are. In our drowsing brain, the subtle vibrations of the suprasensible domain can have an effect on only a very restrained number of cells; the inertia of many of the organic helps of the cerebral phenomenon reduces the number of lively factors, impoverishes the mental synthesis and makes it unfit to transcribe the exercise of the inner states, besides into photographs which might be most commonly vague and inadequate. so your answer is yes. but you have to change your concept about vision.

hope it helped you

suchana02: Thank you!!!☺☺
Albert01: welcone
Albert01: Welcome
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