Neurological studies that map brain activity and the documentation to see what, if any, correlation to the description of the dream itself is the evidence to the personal empirical experience of the dream. The dream is still not evidence, but only a personal experience. The evidence is still external and observable by others (the mapping and logging process).
Personal experience is evidence. It is presented as such in courts all the time.
Personal real world experiences as testimonies supplied in a court are presented as evidence all the time, dream experiences are not typically admissible in court as evidence.
... and before you say it... logging your dreams do not in and of themselves suggest that what you did dream was in fact truth, and does not automatically correlate to real world evidence of the subject of that dream.
Truth != evidence. You don't understand what evidence is.
I never said that truth = evidence. You assumed that I did by twisting my words around. You are dodging and you are trying to warp the idea of what evidence actually is.
Because I saw Star Wars does not mean that I have evidence that the Force actually exists.
If you want to mince hairs... fine. You do not have a shred of
credible 'evidence'. The 'evidence' that you submitted is completely
irrelevant for data to show that such creatures may or may not exist.
Neurological studies are charting patterns in the brain during 'brain related' activities (unless you are going to challenge the idea that dreams are perceived/experienced in the brain). The data gathered will either support or not support the existence of predictable patterns based on dream content. but nothing ventured, nothing gained, they won't know if there are patterns related to dream content unless they at least take a look and gather some data to compare.
Yes, but they still accept the descriptions offered by those dreaming as evidence. They don't go, "We can't match the data to the description, because the description isn't evidence", do they?
*Sigh* The descriptions offered by dreaming are evidence of what precisely? That they had a dream experience? That Nural activity did in fact occur while dreaming?
*Or*
That the dream experience, itself, was a reflection of reality in some sort of clairvoyance?
I'm not disputing that you
had a dream experience. Just that your dream experience is not credible in this case.