Background: Dreams have intrigued thinkers across disciplines due to their immersive and often perplexing nature. They raise fundamental questions regarding consciousness, knowledge, morality, and the self. Traditional views often reject the conscious nature of dreams, while recent developments in lucid dream research challenge these assumptions. Aims and Objectives: This paper explores whether dreams, particularly lucid dreams, are conscious experiences and what implications this has for our understanding of reality, knowledge, and morality. It examines the philosophical and cognitive dimensions of dreaming by analyzing classical theories alongside recent empirical studies. The focus is on the nature of consciousness in dreams, the validity of dream-acquired knowledge, and the ethical responsibility of actions within lucid dreams (the moral implications of our actions in a dream state where we are aware we are dreaming). Materials and Methods: The methodology involves a critical philosophical analysis supported by empirical evidence from cognitive science and dream research. Key thinkers discussed include Descartes, Malcolm, Dennett, LaBerge, Metzinger, and Revonsuo. The research relies on comparative argumentation, phenomenological interpretation, and case studies from lucid dream experiments. Results: The study finds that lucid dreams involve self-awareness, intentionality, and rational thinking, supporting their classification as conscious experiences. Empirical evidence, such as LaBerge’s experiments, confirms awareness during REM sleep. Lucid dreams blur the boundary between dreaming and waking cognition and allow for ethical reflection, indicating that they hold epistemological and moral significance comparable to waking life. Conclusion: Lucid dreams qualify as a legitimate form of conscious experience with significant philosophical implications. They challenge traditional notions of reality and perception, offer insights into selfhood and cognition, and present a meaningful space for moral deliberation. This paper presents the importance of exploring the consciousness of dreams and their implications for reality and morality.
Ayush Srivastava (Tue,) studied this question.