@article{Lee_2015, title={When is dreaming waking? Continuity, lucidity and transcendence in modern contexts of dreaming}, volume={8}, url={https://journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/IJoDR/article/view/15620}, DOI={10.11588/ijodr.2015.1.15620}, abstractNote={The continuity hypothesis suggests that dreaming is not fully independent of our waking lives. Several factors common to waking have been demonstrated to manifest in the dream-state. Yet, unusual instances of being awake in dreaming may represent autochthonous forms of consciousness that are not necessarily correlated with the parameters of the waking world. This juxtaposition of continuity/discontinuity parallels the natural attitude in the waking world and challenges to it in reenchantment. Addressing the correspondencce between debates on continuity/discontinuity and contextual changes may provide an alternative perspective for redefining the boundaries between waking and dreaming.}, number={1}, journal={International Journal of Dream Research}, author={Lee, Raymond L.M.}, year={2015}, month={May}, pages={66–71} }