I thought it would be interesting to look a little at what light clinical research might cast on these issues.
"Throughout the night, the sleeping brain cycles through three stages of non-REM (rapid eye movement) sleep, alternating with REM sleep, which is when most dreaming occurs. Each of these has a distinctive EEG pattern. None of those resembles the EEG of a brain under general anesthesia, however. In fact, general anesthesia EEG patterns are most similar to those of a comatose brain. As Brown points out, general anesthesia is essentially a “reversible coma.”" (
http://news.mit.edu/2010/anesthesia-brown-0103)
Research has apparently shown that general anesthetic dreaming occurs just before emerging from the anesthesia, not during it. "Anesthetic-related dreaming seems to occur just before awakening and is associated with a rapid eye movement-like electroencephalographic pattern." (the researchers call it "covert REM") (
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19672164)
"Dreaming was reported on emergence by 27% of propofol patients and 28% of desflurane patients. Patients reported simple dreams about family, friends, work, and recreation. No patients reported awareness during anesthesia, and there were no dreams that were suggestive of intraoperative memory formation." This was a study with 300 patients. (
http://anesthesiology.pubs.asahq.org/art...id=1923911)
It looks as if during both the comatose condition and the general anesthesia induced quasi-comatose condition the brain is profoundly depressed in activity and there is no actual dreaming taking place, at least any indicated by EEG.
Of course all the research is done from the mind=brain materialist standpoint, and has worked out an elaborate set of hypotheses and theories along those lines. But from an interactive dualist standpoint I would interpret this to imply that maybe during deep general anesthesia the spirit is locked in to the physical brain and experiences nothing, certainly not the passage of time or dreams. Because the neurological machine it is locked into is functioning only at a very low level. As the person comes out of anesthesia the spirit progressively becomes no longer suppressed by the brain and starts to be aware. Sometimes dreaming occurs during this transient period of awakening. In a certain percentage of these occurrences the patient recalls the dreams.
I wonder if there are any mediumistic communications or channelings that address this.
Studies showing evident recall of music or other things during general anesthesia seem to be due to the rare instances of anesthesia awareness occurring when the anesthesia is not deep enough, which often cause a lot of psychological problems.
We don't know whether the occasional recall of dreams during emergence from anesthesia is due to occasional formation of memories, or to occasional recall of memories that are always formed. It may be a clue that research indicates that it happens when the awakening process is prolonged somewhat.
The dreaming process looks like it is built in to the neurological design of the mammalian brain and fundamentally isn't a function of the spirit.