Well, it might help the mad fool out of the fly trap...
But only if he wants out. — Banno
How are you using "idealism" and "realism" here? — Banno
Dreams are ideas...physical reality is obviously influenced, maybe even created by ideas. — Anthony
That strikes me as quite backwards. Dreams are influenced by the physical world. — Banno
If I have a thought of making a fist with my hand...a fist of my hand then occurs in a reality mutual to the thought and the fist being made. — Anthony
Babies live in a dream world of pure ideation/dreams, — Anthony
We do not know the nature of reality. — Pop
I would say reality is created when emotion agrees with reason — Pop
Does the sophistry never end on this forum?You are positing a... something... between your idea and your hand, and then have the temerity to call it a reality? Looks like brillig to me. — Banno
The rest is indiscernible from waffle. — Banno
The rest is indiscernible from waffle. — Banno
I know this is like the largest question there is, but how did we even come up with the concept of "real?" — TiredThinker
Did we ever come across something that wasn't real or was less real somehow? Do we just compare real against our imagination or flaws in memories? — TiredThinker
There's a difference between these two worlds. — TheMadFool
Indeed, there is. This world is real, in contrast to dream worlds. — Banno
I would say the "concept" of real came from speculation, thought, consciousness/mind and inconsistency. — Cobra
The depandency of dreams on reality makes dreams real. Dreams are a part of ourselves in the same manner we are a part of this world instead of ourselves being a part of (our) dreams; in this way, dream worlds are not something apart/different from reality. — Daniel
I think the difference is that reality is independent of dreams while dreams are not independent of reality. The dependancy of dreams on reality makes dreams real. Dreams are a part of ourselves in the same manner we are a part of this world instead of ourselves being a part of (our) dreams; in this way, dream worlds are not something apart/different from reality — Daniel
In general and with some exceptions, everyone has a clear perception of what is real and what is not. But this is not discursive knowledge, but immediate knowledge. We can analyze this — David Mo
Resistance or adversity means that reality resists your attempts at physical or mental manipulation.
You say that the stone is real becauseit resists your manipulation. That is why you say it exists. — David Mo
Coherence means that the objects you call real are consistent with each other (regulated if possible)and with other men. They form a "world" with meaning or structure.
You say a dream is not real because it is inconsistent with what we call the real world and other dreams.
You mean parochial knowledge? — Cobra
If the perceived object is perceived by more than one sense (sight and touch, for example); has a sufficient duration (continuous or intermittent); is consistent with different perspectives, specially when is perceived by several people, etc., the possibilities of error decrease till insignificance. Much more if what is perceived falls within an explanatory theory confirmed by other experiences. If we want to say that this gives a 100% probability, of course. Nothing in this world has a 100% chance to arrive, except death and taxes.but I wouldn't call it necessarily clear perception of what is real - since it is subject to error, bias and illusion, as all perceptions. — Cobra
I would say it exists not because it is immune to mental manipulation (we do this all the time), but because it persists whether we mentally "manipulate," it or not. — Cobra
Reality will be what it will be. But men call something that meets those conditions (or simiilar) real. If you want to know how something is real regardless of the way men know it, you are lost on the road to nothingness. I'm not going in there.Wouldn't reality be universal regardless of any consistency and coherence(?) from men. — Cobra
That which has an effect/affect.
— creativesoul
Seconded. — Mww
No. I am atheist. — David Mo
If the perceived object is perceived by more than one sense (sight and touch, for example); has a sufficient duration (continuous or intermittent); is consistent with different perspectives, specially when is perceived by several people, etc.,the possibilities of error decrease till insignificance. — David Mo
Reality will be what it will be. But men call something that meets those conditions (or simiilar) real. If you want to know how something is real regardless of the way men know it, you are lost on the road to nothingness. I'm not going in there. — David Mo
It was a joke,What does parochial knowledge have to do with atheism? — Cobra
How would you say the possibility for error decreases to insignificance just because it has a consistency with multiple perceptions? We all continuously see (experience) a blue sky, and multiple other things. — Cobra
But it seems to me that since Kant it has become clear that things themselves are unknowable. We talk about what we can talk about, which are the phenomena, and we distinguish those that have a certain degree of (real) objectivity from the subjective ones. It works.Just because we experience things doesn't mean we know them or they exist outside of a mental construct. — Cobra
it has become clear that things themselves are unknowable. — David Mo
This unfortunate unknowability of threads themselves makes discussion of philosophy quite impossible. — unenlightened
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