To questions about the validity of personal testimony, Mrs Peach has made the same points I would have. Obviously one must deliberate about the evidence presented, but such testimony is still considered evidence, irrespective of whether or not the jury believe it. As for dreams being accepted as part of testimony in a court of law, this does happen when relevant.
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.
I didn't twist your words around at all. You said "logging your dreams do not in and of themselves suggest that what you did dream was in fact truth" in a discussion about whether or not dreams can be considered as evidence of something. Now, either you're confusing evidence and truth, or you're making an irrelevant point that borders on being a straw man argument. If you're not equating truth with evidence, why are you talking about it? I have never said dreams are always true, so pick your poisen.
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.
"Credible" by what standard or metric? I consider them to be very credible evidence.
*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?
Hold on! Scientists have conducted studies which match kinds of dream to kinds of neural activity, and linked aspects of dream content to that activity. They assume that the experiences are as described, and thus constitute evidence in their studies.
I'm not disputing that you had a dream experience. Just that your dream experience is not credible in this case.
Again, credible according to what standard?