The Epistemic Limits of Impactful Dreams: Metacognition, Metaphoricity, and Sublime Feeling
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Impactful Dream Types: Manifest Content
1.1.1. Primary Emotions
1.1.2. Spontaneous Transformations
1.1.3. Dual Perspectives
1.1.4. Manifest Content: Implications
2. Intrinsic Oneiric Metaphoricity
2.1. Spreading Activation and the Metaphoricity of Dream Cognition
2.2. Carryover Effects and Mundane Dream Metaphoricity
2.3. Carryover Effects and Impactful Dream Metaphoricity
2.4. Metacognitive (Noetic) Feelings
2.4.1. A Metacognitive “Felt Sense” of Metaphoric/Literal Tension
2.4.2. Attentional Reorienting, Category Transformation, and Metaphoric/Literal Tension
2.4.3. Openness to Experience and Metaphoric/Literal Tension
2.4.4. Performative Improvisation and Metacognitive Appraisal
3. Temporally Extended Metaphoric Interplay
3.1. A Generic Linguistic Example
- Time is a river that carries me along,
- and I am the river;
- It is a tiger that devours me,
- and I am the tiger;
- It is a fire that consumes me,
- and I am the fire.
3.2. An Oneiric Example
In this dream, three successive episodes (separated here by //) present semantically resonant portrayals of concern about coercive intimacy (worry about rapists in an Alberta hotel hallway; unwelcome assistance to filial fellow travelers in a hotel in France; aversion to a series of familiar voices who seem to know what is “best” for the dreamer). Although less simply than in the Borges lines that present compound metaphoric representations of “time”, this three-episode structure presents compound metaphoric representations of the coercive character of inauthentically intimate relationships.The Hotel Dream. [I was in] a hotel in southern Alberta or someplace. I was traveling by myself, I think, and I remember worrying about rapists in the hall and this sort of thing. I remember thinking, “Well, I’ll have to be brave because I’m by myself”. So I took this room in a secluded area of the hotel … and anyway it seemed to work out. // And then this hotel seemed to be in France. My family was with me, and we were all in a room together. We were packing to leave. I was very organized; I had all of my stuff ready to go … My family was very disorganized and I was having to help them. I didn’t want to. I thought, “Well, they can do it themselves; I’m not responsible for their packing”. But it was almost impossible not to help them because I needed another bag or two and I had things stored in a particular drawer and they had dumped all their stuff in there, too. So in order for me to get this packing done, I had to help them anyway // [Then I think I had gone off on my own for a while] and I came back [to the hotel again.] I got a phone call, an overseas phone call from my Dad … He had gotten a doctor’s report, and the doctor said that he [had an ailment that] would never heal. And I had plans about my whole family moving to France … but he just told me how sick he was and that he would never heal. And there was some stupid person on the phone … some practical sounding person, who was sticking her nose in there. I kept telling her to shut up … and I was really upset and crying very hard. My Dad said that he wanted to talk to my Mom. So my Mom came to the phone [and she thought that it wasn’t practical to live in France]. She seemed to think that it was better to stay in Canada. I was surprised by her ability to say what was best for me … and I remember trying to talk her into it. I was overwhelmed by the fact that my father would never heal. I couldn’t be with him and also stay in France. I woke up crying. I was just really sad. I felt this sadness just coming out of the bottom of my soul, from way down deep some place.
3.3. A Hierarchy of Figurative Relations
3.3.1. Detectable Semantic Resonance
3.3.2. Detectable Unidirectional Metaphoricity
3.3.3. Detectable Bidirectional Metaphoricity
3.3.4. Metaphors of Personal Identification
4. Metacognition at the Abstract Ontological Limits of Sublime Feeling
4.1. Affective Awakenings
4.2. Symbolic Hypotyposis
Ricoeur goes on to describe (a) how poetic metaphoricity entails “discourse [that is] turned back upon itself and spurred on by [another] metaphorical utterance”; (b) how such discourse is iteratively extended (perhaps indefinitely) to constitute a poetic theme; and (c) how poetic thematization approximates (without attaining) abstract ontological determination. Such iteratively extended and unfolding thematization does not simply reduce poesy to the explicative identification of abstract ontological concepts. Rather, such thematization moves toward further metaphoric modulation that persistently—but always inadequately—is sensed as an approximation of abstract ontological concepts.“… as a mode of discourse that functions at the intersection of two domains, metaphorical and speculative. It is therefore a composite discourse, and as such cannot but feel the opposite pull of two rival demands. On one side, interpretation seeks the clarity of the [abstract ontological] concept; on the other, it hopes to preserve the dynamism of meaning that the [abstract ontological] concept holds and pins down. This is the situation Kant considers in the celebrated paragraph 49 of the Critique of the Faculty of Judgment. … [The interplay] in which imagination and understanding engage assumes a task assigned by the Ideas of reason, to which no [abstract ontological] concept is equal. But where the understanding fails, imagination still has the power of ‘presenting’ the Idea (Darstellung). It is this ‘presentation’ of the Idea by the imagination that forces conceptual thought to think more. Creative imagination is nothing other than this demand put to [abstract ontological] conceptual thought.”(p. 303)
4.3. Implications
5. Sublime Feeling: Disquietude and Enthrallment
5.1. Sublime Disquietude
5.2. Sublime Enthrallment
Oneiric Sublime Enthrallment: An Example
In this dream, successive episodes (separated here by //) provide semantically resonant representations through which the dreamer becomes more respectfully aware of the dangerous beauty of the snakes’ participation in distributed ontological intersubjectivity. In the first episode, the snakes’ presence is suggested by a pictorial image on the cover of a box that contains them; metaphorically their sentience is a teasingly hidden gift. In the second episode, the colorfully present snakes are disclosed in a threatening form that motivates the dreamer’s anxious resistance; metaphorically their sentience is antagonistic. In the third episode, the same colorfully presented snakes are quiet and peaceful, motivating the dreamer’s touch and dialogue; metaphorically their sentience is that of mutual intentionality. The snakes share the subjectivity of the dreamer; metaphorically their awareness—and the dreamer’s—is mutual and respectful. The culminating moment of “release” is not appreciation of a gift or relief from antagonistic threat—but rather non-utilitarian regard. The snakes retain their beauty (as in the decorated box); they retain their danger (they still “must leave”); but they also have the capacity for dialogue. Like the Hotel Dream, each successive metaphor deepens and enlivens without erasing its predecessor.The Snake Dream. I dream that I am climbing a stairs, coming to a landing. There are windows on both sides [and] high walls. It’s very bright. Four people are there, and one person in particular is … interacting with me. He hands me a box that is gift-wrapped and … about shoe size. I start opening the box and then I [see it has] a cover [with] snakes [on it] … Obviously there is a feeling of friendship between us or a feeling of comfortable joking … and I ask, “Oh, you wouldn’t dare, would you?” And, he said, “Well, you’ll have to open it and find out”. // So I open the box and, when I open the box, this multitude, this large number of snakes come out of the box. They’re very thin, and they’re long like ribbons. They’re black, shiny, with yellow heads. They all wrap around my lower right leg like a cuff … I’m trying to push them away, to kick them off, feeling panicky, trying to … pry them off. And the more I try, the more I’m getting nowhere, the tighter they are wrapping themselves -- // until I suddenly calm down and start looking at them and see how they fit together and how they are not dangerous snakes. I start looking at them and I notice the color of their backs and how they seem to be so quiet and peaceful. So, I start touching them gently and, as I’m touching them, I’m talking to them. And, eventually I say, “OK, now you have to leave”, and they do leave… // When the snakes did leave, I felt like I was light, I was lighter in weight, but there was also a sense of release…
6. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Nightmares | Existential Dreams | Transcendent Dreams | |
---|---|---|---|
Feelings and Emotions | Fear/anxiety | Sadness/despair | Ecstasy/awe |
Narrative Themes | Harm avoidance | Separation/loss | (Magical) goal attainment |
Movement Characteristics | Energetic (evasive) movement | Movement inhibition (fatigue) | Graceful movement (floating) |
Sensory Anomalies | --- | Unusual light/dark contrasts | Extraordinary sources of light |
Spontaneous Transformations | Physical metamorphoses | Spontaneous feeling shifts | Spontaneous perspective shifts |
Concluding Affective Tone | Intense dream endings | Intense dream endings | Intense dream endings |
Metacognitive Stance | --- | Dual Perspectives | Dual Perspectives |
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Kuiken, D. The Epistemic Limits of Impactful Dreams: Metacognition, Metaphoricity, and Sublime Feeling. Brain Sci. 2024, 14, 528. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci14060528
Kuiken D. The Epistemic Limits of Impactful Dreams: Metacognition, Metaphoricity, and Sublime Feeling. Brain Sciences. 2024; 14(6):528. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci14060528
Chicago/Turabian StyleKuiken, Don. 2024. "The Epistemic Limits of Impactful Dreams: Metacognition, Metaphoricity, and Sublime Feeling" Brain Sciences 14, no. 6: 528. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci14060528
APA StyleKuiken, D. (2024). The Epistemic Limits of Impactful Dreams: Metacognition, Metaphoricity, and Sublime Feeling. Brain Sciences, 14(6), 528. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci14060528