So you are saying that just because animals dream, we do too?!? How do animals dream then and how is that useful in evolutionary terms. Also, this stuff about phermomones is actually not quite right if you think about it because we have developed deodorant which gets rid of body odour. Now, why would we try to get rid of the smell that's suppose to attract us to each other. Seems to be doing the opposite.
Also, phermone has nothing to do with love. You can fall in love with people over the internet. Which phermones are involved there.
I'm not saying evolution doesn't happen at all. Things do change and adapt. But there are things that have not changed for millions of years at all. Evolution on it's own doesn't explain everything. It certainly doesn't explain the physical conditions required for life and how they came to be...
Also, look into people who have come out in the open and admitted that they were forced to admit things about evolution that weren't true and these are scientists and museum people...
Do some research on pheromones before you go making such an argument. If I listed which pheromones did what, would you even absorb the information, let alone retain it? To start, pheromones do not have an actual "smell" that we can consciously perceive. From an article talking about pheromone sensory organs in the nose:
According to most biology textbooks, detection of pheromones takes place in a specialized structure, called the vomeronasal organ (VNO). Although the VNO resides in the nasal cavity, the pheromone sensory system is distinct from the sense of smell, as are the chemical receptors involved. In animals possessing a pheromone sensory system -- including mice, dogs, cats, and elephants -- the system governs a range of genetically preprogrammed mating, social ranking, maternal, and territorial defense behaviors.
Please note, pheromones in the animal world are NOT limited to mammals, that makes this article a little misleading. I believe there are plenty of invertebrates that use pheromones.
Evolution, by the way, isn't an explanation for the requirements of life. This demonstrates that you don't quite understand the forces behind evolution, the first of which dictates that the organism, in order to live, must adapt to the environment, not the other way around.
As for dreaming, it seems to be related to play in animals (and, for the record, we're animals, too), in that the higher the level of cognition (also sometimes referred to as intelligence, a deceptive term) the more likely the organism is to play and dream.