I'm not sure, but according to a few of the preceding posts (Rammaster) I think it is.
For some reason this night in South-east France the moon was pretty low and orange.
Yet the blood moon is over since 3 days.
[QUOTE=Fleskhjerta;44574284]For some reason this night in South-east France the moon was pretty low and orange.
Yet the blood moon is over since 3 days.[/QUOTE]
That's a common occurence due to particles in the atmosphere while the moon is low. Same reason for the sun being red.
I had a violent dream on the night of April Fourteenth...
[QUOTE=TheNerdPest14;44574606]I had a violent dream on the night of April Fourteenth...[/QUOTE]
The hallucinations conceived by your brain while you're asleep has nothing to do with the state of the moon.
[QUOTE=Quark:;44574738]The hallucinations conceived by your brain while you're asleep has nothing to do with the state of the moon.[/QUOTE]
I think it's called dreaming not hallucinating.
[QUOTE=Falubii;44574972]I think it's called dreaming not hallucinating.[/QUOTE]
Your dreams are literally the result of your brain not receiving enough external stimulus. When your brain lacks external stimulus, it makes stuff up to stay busy. Hence, hallucinations. These hallucinations, dreams, are based on random strands of information from various areas of your subconscious.
Take a look at the Ganzfeld Effect for more related information.
Saw this out at sea on a boat. It was fantasticccc.
[QUOTE=TheNerdPest14;44574606]I had a violent dream on the night of April Fourteenth...[/QUOTE]
so did thousands of other people worldwide
[QUOTE=Quark:;44575656]Your dreams are literally the result of your brain not receiving enough external stimulus. When your brain lacks external stimulus, it makes stuff up to stay busy. Hence, hallucinations. These hallucinations, dreams, are based on random strands of information from various areas of your subconscious.
Take a look at the Ganzfeld Effect for more related information.[/QUOTE]
[quote]A hallucination is a perception in the absence of apparent stimulus that has qualities of real perception. Hallucinations are vivid, substantial, and located in external objective space. [b]They are distinguished from the related phenomena of dreaming, which does not involve wakefulness[/b][/quote]
Dammit i was hoping for werewolf attacks or some cool shit like that, but all that happened was that the moon had it's period
So freakin pissed right now
[QUOTE=Ashes;44576335]Dammit i was hoping for werewolf attacks or some cool shit like that, but all that happened was that the moon had it's period
So freakin pissed right now[/QUOTE]
at least it looked awesome; and you can always count on the blood gods
[QUOTE=Kite_shugo;44576341]at least it looked awesome[/QUOTE]
Did it?
I couldn't see anything but black sky after the clouds rolled in.
[QUOTE=Falubii;44576325][/QUOTE]
[url]http://www.sleepassociation.org/index.php?p=hallucinationsduringsleep[/url]
[QUOTE]
Hallucinations occur in the state between waking and sleeping (the person is considered to be technically asleep during these hallucinations though), as opposed to dreams or lucid dreams, which occur while asleep. Illusions occur while awake, and are classified as a sensory misrepresentation of an external stimulus, while hallucinations occur in the absence of any external stimuli. Hallucinations most often occur in the stages before or after sleep, explaining their connection as a sleep related disorder. Hallucinations can occur at any time, though this article will only look at hallucinations as they are connected to sleep.
[/QUOTE]
[url]http://www.sidis.net/hallucination.htm[/url]
[QUOTE]
Both hallucinations and dreams develop under the same conditions of dissociation. The nature of dreams and hallucinations are essentially the same. An isolated dissociated system of secondary sensory and representative elements predisposed to function become awakened by a special peripheral stimulus or by a summation of series of stimulations and gives rise to hallucinations or dreams according to the general state of consciousness, waking or sleeping. The hallucination of the comparatively waking state stands out alone, it remains more or less isolated and becomes obliterated by the general inrushing flood of peripheral sensations and perceptions of the waking consciousness. The dream is made up of a series of hallucinations going sometimes to form a complicated hallucination expanded into a whole life history. From this standpoint we may say a hallucination is an abbreviated dream, while a dream is an expanded hallucination.
[/QUOTE]
Dreams are hallucinations. They occur while you are asleep, due to the near total lack of external stimuli (which your brain really loves) and as such invents its own stimuli - hallucinations.
They may be closely related phenomenon or even the same, but most people refer to hallucinations when one is partially conscious, and dreams for when someone is unconscious. I never argued that the phenomenon aren't ssimilar. Also cute edit message :)
Would you call your doctor if you had frequent dreams? Probably not. Would you call your doctor if you had frequent hallucinations? Probably. There's a pretty obvious difference between the two and it's kind of hilarious how badly you need to be right.
[QUOTE=Falubii;44576565]They may be closely related phenomenon or even the same, but most people refer to hallucinations when one is partially conscious, and dreams for when someone is unconscious. I never argued that the phenomenon aren't ssimilar. Also cute edit message :)
Would you call your doctor if you had frequent dreams? Probably not. Would you call your doctor if you had frequent hallucinations? Probably. There's a pretty obvious difference between the two and it's kind of hilarious how badly you need to be right.[/QUOTE]
Whenever they ignore everyone and try to prove an incorrect point that usually means trolling (For example stroma's posts when he was defending russia and and ignoring what everyone told him)
Maybe if you had an education on anything related to neurology you'd have an idea of what you're talking about. I'll leave you to your intentional ignorance.
[QUOTE=Quark:;44591633]Maybe if you had an education on anything related to neurology you'd have an idea of what you're talking about. I'll leave you to your intentional ignorance.[/QUOTE]
Maybe if you had any common sense you would realize that literally nobody but you calls dreaming hallucinating.
[QUOTE=Falubii;44591858]Maybe if you had any common sense you would realize that literally nobody but you calls dreaming hallucinating.[/QUOTE]
I guess we can just toss those sources right out the window then. Those don't matter.
He is right. That definition basically just said the dreaming is hallucinating when unconscious and is only referred to as a different name to show the distinction between hallucinating when awake and asleep.
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