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This book presents three lectures by Allan Hobson, entitled The
William James Lectures on Dream Consciousness . The three lectures
expose the new psychology, the new physiology and the new
philosophy that derive from and support the protoconsciousness
hypothesis of dreaming. They review in detail many of the studies
on sleep and dreaming conducted since the days of Sigmund Freud.
Following the lectures are commentaries written by scholars whose
expertise covers a wide range of scientific disciplines including,
but not limited to, philosophy, psychology, neurology,
neuropsychology, cognitive science, biology and animal sciences.
The commentaries each answer a specific question in relation to
Hobson s lectures and his premise that dreaming is an altered state
of consciousness. Capitalizing on a vast amount of data, the
lectures and commentaries provide undisputed evidence that sleep
consists of a well-organized sequence of subtly orchestrated brain
states that undoubtedly play a crucial function in the maintenance
of normal brain functions. These functions include both basic
homeostatic processes necessary to keep the organism alive as well
as the highest cognitive functions including perception, decision
making, learning and consciousness."
This book presents three lectures by Allan Hobson, entitled “The
William James Lectures on Dream Consciousness”. The three
lectures expose the new psychology, the new physiology and the new
philosophy that derive from and support the protoconsciousness
hypothesis of dreaming. They review in detail many of the studies
on sleep and dreaming conducted since the days of Sigmund Freud.
Following the lectures are commentaries written by scholars whose
expertise covers a wide range of scientific disciplines including,
but not limited to, philosophy, psychology, neurology,
neuropsychology, cognitive science, biology and animal sciences.
The commentaries each answer a specific question in relation to
Hobson’s lectures and his premise that dreaming is an altered
state of consciousness. Capitalizing on a vast amount of data, the
lectures and commentaries provide undisputed evidence that sleep
consists of a well-organized sequence of subtly orchestrated brain
states that undoubtedly play a crucial function in the maintenance
of normal brain functions. These functions include both basic
homeostatic processes necessary to keep the organism alive as well
as the highest cognitive functions including perception, decision
making, learning and consciousness.
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