Not-That-Bright
Andrew Quah
Many people claim to see alot of things. I don't doubt that many people may 'experience' whatever you're describing, but in reality there would be a much more mundane explanation than any supernatural one they probably attribute to it.Many people see things when they don't even expect it. What's even more incredible is that the things appearing in front of them was so vivid that it was as if they're co-existing in that envronment. Yes, a lot of the time they were not sleeping. Eg. a guy was sitting in the toilet. and he just started seeing the floor on an atomic scale with all the partciles colliding and vibrating.
Unfortunately it has little to do with 'intelligence' and much more with how critical you're willing to examine your surroundings, not that anyone is perfect. If you want proof just watch a live show by a good magician, he will trick you and you often won't be able to explain how he did it.If not everyone, most people would be intelligent enough to tell the difference between hallucination and reality.
Illusions can be as vivid as reality.Like when you just had a dream, you might feel it was real while you were in the dream, but when you wake you you would soon realise that it was a dream because the images was not as vivid as reality
Not 'more vivid' than reality, just as vivid.People are just not accustomed to imagining things that are more vivid than reality.
I don't get the point of this question... it might be the odd wording that puts me off.. Have you ever imagined something that you had even fooled yourself that it was real? I bet you haven't.
Yes, reality is a very powerful thing. It's hard to believe our delusions for many reasons, #1 being that others don't also believe them, making us feel we must be wrong by majority rule and #2 because reality is always there no matter how hard you try to deny it.Why, because we just don't believe in things that we imagine even when we try to delude ourselves.
But that doesn't stop people from having such delusions.