Non-Local Consciousness and the Anthropology of Dreams

Fascination and concern about experiences in dreams is one of humanity's oldest and most universal cultural traits, tracing back unrecorded millennia into deep time. Psychologists Frederick L. Collidge and Thomas Wynn, authors of How to Think Like a Neanderthal, writing in Psychology Today, argued that more meat in the diet of Australopithecines, allowed for larger brain development. This made Australopithecines more perceptive, and that allowed them to better assess risks, and led to them feeling safe enough to sleep on the ground, instead of in trees.
Source: Explore - Category: Nursing Authors: Tags: Schwartzreport Source Type: research