I would love to find that this is true, because it is consistent with my philosophy. To me, the soul which enters the baby as it grows in the womb has chosen that womb (and that lifetime) for its own spiritual development reasons. And I also believe that memory of its last incarnation persist in some way until experience in this new one replaces them. Indeed, there are many stories of babies who exclaim a word or two at being smacked on the bottom at birth, then tremble and go back to being ordinary babies, who do not learn to talk for several years.
So the bridging of the gap would be dreams.
2006-12-16 19:48:54
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answer #1
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answered by auntb93again 7
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Not in our mothers stomach's no. At some point before birth I would assume that a fetus would "dream" but they would do it as blind people do... audio only. At 5-7 months, yes, definatly. The brain is working harder then ever at that time I would think they would be more likely to have the most vivid dreams then at any other stage in life.
2006-12-17 02:31:34
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answer #2
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answered by nmsosnoski 2
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By the way, we do not live in the stomach before birth. I am sure you meant the womb.
A dream is really a reflection of life's experiences. That's how we the laymen explain complex scientific terms. When in the womb, we have not yet had life's experiences and we are not really conscious of ourselves yet. Everything which happens to us, including the very magnificent turning "upside-down" takes place literally by genetic instruction (instinct). Our brain starts registering experiences the moment we cry out to the world to announce our arrival. It's after we have gathered sufficient experiences that the dream phenomenon can take place... I hope I am useful to you!!
2006-12-17 02:57:23
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answer #3
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answered by 1967 2
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Babies that old experience what is called the REM cycle. During this cycle is when you dream. It is said that you dream from experiences. Babies that old, obviously do not have much life experience.. so they must dream about the mothers heartbeat... or voices outside of the womb, or even the gurgling of the mothers stomach... you know.. the things that are familiar to that baby at that gestational age.
2006-12-17 02:42:42
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answer #4
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answered by Jeni W 2
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Firstly, you can't "see" dreams as you would in your waking life.
Whatever the case, dreams are merely the result of your mind sorting out what is happening. As a child in the womb, the mind is sorting out what it knows, the simple instincts that it will need then and in the near future.
2006-12-17 02:29:13
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answer #5
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answered by Mercenary Poet 2
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I think that is right. If s/he sees something that could be dream...
Am I dreaming now?Are you dreaming?Where you know that I am in your dream and writing these sentences?
So, it is possible to see dreams that time, every time. If this world is not a dream or dreams, it is still possible to see dreams because we have mind-ability to think.
2006-12-17 04:41:49
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answer #6
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answered by ORKAN E 2
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Well, I think that this depends on if thought exists at that stage, and further memory and emotion, because it is a combination of all three that produce dreams.
2006-12-17 02:27:10
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answer #7
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answered by emma h 1
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I wouldn't call it dreaming, but they do have something similiar. Basically its to stimulate neuron growth and connections in the brain.
2006-12-17 02:30:47
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answer #8
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answered by AdamKadmon 7
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a human can only dream about what they have experienced.
Thus a baby can dream.
2006-12-17 02:28:22
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answer #9
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answered by clcalifornia 7
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yes.
2006-12-17 02:26:01
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answer #10
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answered by jemrx2 4
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