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Supernal Dreaming: On Myth and Metaphysics

Lee Irwin

Religions October 26, 2020 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.3390/rel11110552 via OpenAlex

Summary

This article develops a typology of dreams, distinguishing normative-rational, mythic-imaginal, psychic-intuitive, and supernal-transpersonal types, with supernal dreams described as profound, participatory, revelatory events. Using examples from the author's dream journal, it places these types within a metatheory where dreams connect agency to a sentient, process-based cosmology. Dreaming is presented as a visionary capacity that fosters human development, ontological insights, paranormal perceptions, and new enactive ways of life.

Study at a glance

Design theoretical or philosophical paper
Key finding Dreams can be classified into four types—normative-rational, mythic-imaginal, psychic-intuitive, and supernal-transpersonal—that function within a sentient cosmology to sustain human development and inspire ontological and paranormal insights.

Abstract

The following article is an exploration of supernal dreaming, a type of dream that engages the dreamer as a profound, participatory, and often revelatory event. Dream types are not well developed in dream research; this article contributes to the development of a more typological approach to dream analysis. Four dream types are presented and contextualized with reference to their metaphysical and ontological significance. The types discussed are normative-rational dreams, mythic-imaginal dreams, psychic-intuitive dreams, and supernal-transpersonal dreams. The various types are illustrated with examples from the author’s extensive dream journal in order to highlight the subtle distinctions between the dream types, and how they might intersect or overlap. The dream morphology is placed within a larger context of metatheory based on the ontological significance of agency and its relationship, through dreaming, to a sentient cosmology. This cosmology is based on a creative, process-based metaphysics, in which dreams function to sustain and promote human development. Dreaming is presented as a visionary capacity leading to new enactive and embodied ways of life. The article shows how dreams can act as a stimulus for ontological insights and become a basis for paranormal perceptions and an inspirational approach to dream actualization.

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