Or, in more plain language, no matter who or what controls your "dream", if you analise behaviour and laws and based on these observations develop a theory how things in your dream work which allow reliable predictions, you're doing science, No matter wheather you're really in a dream or not.
I never said you could NOT do science on your perceived reality
You can easily count how many sheep you dream about each night, and note that in your notebook, and then extrapolate some theory about dream-sheep from that.
However, what I DID say is that HOW you INTERPRET the reality you personally experience is always, at it's core base of understanding, a matter of BELIEF.
That is: You either BELIEVE it's a dream you are having, maybe a bit like virtual reality, and that the sheep are virtual creations of your own mind, or you BELIEVE it's a real world existing outside, and independent of, your mind, and that the sheep are actually there in their own right, that they are non-virtual, or you BELIEVE something else (whatever that may be)
The sheep you see may behave and look just the same, regardless of whether you believe they're virtual or real (or actually unicorns in disguise as sheep, should that happen to be the case)
Perhaps your argument makes less sense to me, because I am a lucid dreamer. That is, I *can* control the vast majority of things inside my dreams.
I actually predicted talk about lucid dreaming would come

(since it's not the first time I have this debate about solipsism)
I can do lucid dreaming to, some times.
But as you point out yourself, your control is limited. You don't go to bed knowing WHAT dream you'll have and how it should play out in every exact detail, but you CAN sometimes control the course of the dream (like undoing an action, or rewinding some events and then have them play out differently the second time)
You can't force yourself to dream a particular dream on request, like ordering a pay-per-view movie you want to see, or atleast I can't. If that was possible I would never dream about anything but beautiful women
Where the religious people go wrong is trying to drive a wedge between science and belief by taking metaphors and analogies literally instead of using their mind to just appreciate how cool it all really is. I admit I'm biased, I have a lot of faith in the scientific method as the best way to describe our reality, but I don't discount the possibility for a higher power.
That coupling is exactly what I also would like people to appreciate. We are all in the same boat; we see some kind of reality play out before us, and we all have to make up our own minds about WHAT this reality is. That's why I don't like when it becomes science versus god. That kind of thinking only divides us and creates gaps between us, where there are no real gaps.
No matter what each of us subjectively think is real, we could be wrong. And thus we should always allow other people to have their beliefs in peace without ridiculing or patronizing them, just as they should also allow us to have our beliefs in peace.
A mutual understanding for that premise, that none of us can say we have absolute insight, hopefully could yield some more respect for one another. So that science would leave spirituality in peace, and spirituality would leave science in peace, because both 'camps' would realize that 'reality' is a strictly personal thing and that we are completely equally limited from knowing it fully.
No more blowing up abortion-clinics because your god tells you to, and no more banning of saying grace in schools, where they wish to do so, because you feel religion is unethical. Live and let live, practised by both sides.
Yet another difference between science and religion--science will happily admit there is room for error and that they might be wrong, while religions proclaim that they have all the facts and they're always right, and then quietly change their tune over the course of centuries as they are proven wrong...
So you will admit that you could be wrong and I could be right?
Actually I don't want to mash any more potatoes on this subject since it will probably be something people will debate for ever anyways without ever being able to reach any final conclusions that all are happy with
But thanks for the talk Hielor :tiphat:
Disagreeing is not a crime
