Wouldn't the mind remain objectively real?I was referring to metaphysical antirealism which is the idea that "nothing exists outside the mind". I was wondering what the scientific implications would be of such a viewpoint. — Michael McMahon
An antirealist is "a person who denies the existence of an objective reality". It sees "no access to a mind-independent reality, even if it exists". But "if you don't believe in scientific
realism, you can still do and use science. You can believe that science may not tell us about a physical world but rather tell us about a mental one instead". — Michael McMahon
And I think a credible ant-realist epistemology simply acknowledges the fundamental role that the mind plays in any knowledge act, whether of objects or anything else. — Wayfarer
Or your skull is below the sky, and notes the sky through the imprint the sky leaves upon it - though it cannot directly note the sky."When I look at the sky, the sky I see is inside my head. This means that my skull must be beyond the sky!"
- Lehar — Michael McMahon
Look at a multiple choice test.Superdeterminism: "not only is our behaviour determined, but it is determined precisely in such a way as to prevent us from seeing that the world is deterministic". — Michael McMahon
That would be self-denial.An antirealist is "a person who denies the existence of an objective reality". — Michael McMahon
An antirealist is "a person who denies the existence of an objective reality" — Michael McMahon
Physical reality is 3-dimensional. So would anti-realism imply that the mind is 2-dimensional due to the seeming non-existence of the physical world? — Michael McMahon
Lastly, even if reality was solely mental, I think the world would still be real in the sense that other people exist to perceive it. Even if it isn't physical in nature, it would have to be some sort of projection that we're all participants in. — Michael McMahon
I was referring to metaphysical antirealism which is the idea that "nothing exists outside the mind" — Michael McMahon
Since this topic was resurrected, I want to point out the contradiction of antirealism, defined in the OP as "denial of the existence of an objective reality" and the statement quoted here of "nothing exists except X" where X is the mind in this case. Those two definitions are mutually exclusive, the latter being a form of realism typically knows as idealism, which posits the reality of experiences.I was referring to metaphysical antirealism which is the idea that "nothing exists outside the mind". — Michael McMahon
In other words, anti-realism logically leads to solipsism. Where is this consensus taking place if not in the real world with real human beings? "Consensus" is a term lacking any meaning for an anti-realist.I understand 'antirealism' to mean that it useless to talk about the term 'reality' except in cases where consensenus is being sought as to 'what is the case'. Scientific paradigms are examples of where that consensus operates regarding successful prediction and control of events, and it is 'experienced events' which replace 'physical reality' for the antirealist. The traditional dichotomies like subjective/objective or mental/physical are misleading in understanding 'antirealism' because they are predicated on lay concepts of an observer independent reality. Such dichotomies are considered futile by philosophical pragmatists. — fresco
What does "talking" mean if there isnt a medium that carries this information (that there is something called a physical world that contains cats) between minds?Nor need an antirealist deny that there is a physical world. It is open to them to say that if we talk as if there is a physical world, then by that very fact there is indeed a physical world. — Banno
What would the phrases, "living under a rock", or "living in a bubble" mean for an anti-realist?I personally have found 'existence of an objective reality' to be a meaningless concept, and hence see no reason to assert it, which is a little different than actively denying it, so I'm not sure if I qualify as an antirealist. — noAxioms
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