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Jung describes accounts of luminous sky objects that move with a fluidity resembling thoughts rather than mechanical propulsion. Witnesses report that the objects shift direction or pause as if guided by intention. He sees these characteristics as hallmarks of dream imagery: weightless, symbolic, and responsive to psychological states. The objects thus occupy a liminal zone between vision and dream. Jung uses these reports to illustrate how unconscious content can surface as externalized dreamlike imagery during periods of tension.


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This page was written by an LLM grounded on a corpus of texts related to DSETI topics like Mack, Hopkins, Cannon, and the DSETI books.