Since antiquity, the interpretation of dreams has long oscillated among three mutually isolated paradigms: the desire-reductionism of psychoanalysis, the archetypal symbolism of analytical psychology, and the physiological byproduct theory of neuroscience. Each possesses genuine case support, yet none has been able to establish a unified framework with universal explanatory power. The fundamental reason lies in the absence of a foundational ontological definition of the “dreaming subject.” Based on the PFUSRC axiomatic system, this paper positions dreams for the first time within the complete ontological chain of “Wisdom (First Life) →45° Biconical Topological Structure → β₁ Field Global Projection →Information Anchoring (Ψ-Ξ Coupling) → Carrier (Second Life).” The upgraded edition retains the original ontological framework while constructing a stratified topological nightmare model and a practical intervention system centering on phase anchoring, cognitive consolidation and temporal window amplification. It redefines dreams as responsive signals rather than interpretive texts and provides targeted countermeasures for four nightmare categories. This research elevates dream studies from individual psychological analysis to cosmic topological ontology, offering novel axiomatic foundations, operable classification standards and falsifiable experimental predictions for dream research.
Zhenmin Wang (Wed,) studied this question.