The field of dream study originated in a religious context. In ancient Egypt, the dream interpreters were priests known as "masters of the secret things," who documented their findings in hieroglyphics, their picture alphabet. One such volume exists as part of an archeological discovery known as the Chester Beatty papyrus, an early dream interpretation book that is more than two thousand years old.
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In many ancient cultures, priests and seers who had a talent for interpreting dreams were considered to be divinely gifted. A person who had a particularly significant dream was also believed to be blessed, and only certain people were considered worthy of such dreams. Artemidorus, author of the Oneirocritica , a five-volume book on the dream interpretation practiced by his Greco-Roman contemporaries, wrote in the second century A.D. that "Dreams are proportioned according to the party dreaming. Thus those of eminent persons will be great . . . if poor, their dreams will be very inconsiderable." (The Oneirocritica takes its name from Oneiros, a Greek dream messenger sent by the gods.)
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In the Oneirocritica , Artemidorus refers to an already extensive body of literature on the subject of dreams. In the days of the Greek epic poet Homer (eighth century A.D.), "The dream was not conceived of as an internal experience, a state of mind, or a message from the irrational unconscious to the conscious ego," Susan Parman writes in Dreams and Culture . "Rather, it was an objectified messenger, a supernatural agent sent by a deity (Zeus in The Iliad , Athena in The Odyssey ), or in some cases by the dead." Later, she explains, ancient Greek authors such as Plato, Horace, Virgil, Statius, and Lucian embraced the concept of "true and false dreams,'' some prophetic, and some red herrings.
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In ancient times, dreams were oftenbut not alwaysbelieved to be prophetic, and people of all cultures shared what they had dreamed in hopes of catching a glimpse of the future or
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