History of Dreams

Learn to analyse and understand the meaning of your dreams.

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swetha
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History of Dreams

Post by swetha » Sun Jun 26, 2005 9:39 am

Dream interpretations dates back to 3000-4000 B.C. were they were documented in clay tablets. It is said that people in primal societies were unable to distinguish between the dream world and reality.

Back in the Greek and Roman era, dream interpreters had major role to play in the battlefield. Dreams were extremely significant and often seen as messages from the gods. They were seen in a religious context and in Egypt, priests also acted as dream interpreters. The Egyptians recorded their dreams in hieroglyphics.
People who had the power to interpret dreams were looked up to and seen as divinely gifted. In the bible, there are over seven hundred mentions of dreams. Tracing back to these ancient cultures, people had always had an inclination to interpret dreams

Dreams were also seen as prophetic. People often looked to their dreams for signs of warning and advice. It was an oracle or omen from outside spirits, whether it was a message from a deity, from the dead or even the works of a demon. People in ancient Greece and ancient China looked to their dreams for their next course of action.

Dreaming can be seen as an actual place that your spirit and soul leaves every night to go and visit. The Chinese believed that the soul leaves the body to go into this world. However, if they should be suddenly awakened, their soul may fail to return to the body. For this reason, some Chinese today, are wary of alarm clocks. Some Native American tribes and Mexican civilizations share this same notion of a distinct dream dimension. They believed that their ancestors lived in their dreams and take on non-human forms like plants. They see that dreams as a way of visiting and having contact with their ancestors. Dreams also helped to point their mission or role in life.

In the early 19th century, dreams were dismissed as stemming from anxiety, a household noise or even indigestion. Hence there was really no meaning to it. Later on in the 19th century, Sigmund Freud revived the importance of dreams and its significance and need for interpretation. He revolutionized the study of dreams.

dilip_b11
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Post by dilip_b11 » Mon Jun 27, 2005 7:04 am

Sigmund Freud revived the importance of dreams and its significance and need for interpretation.
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Sigmund Freud : SickMan Freud - lunatic obsessed with ^%&*%^&% his mother.
Other then that, he was gay and was in love with Carl Jung.
The only thing he discovered(??) was the unconscious mind.
"My business is to succeed, and I'm good at it. I create my Iliad by my actions, create it day by day." - Napoleon (1804)

SAVE THE TIGER.

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