Only actual antirealist position I can think of is outright nihilism, and from what I understand of that, no, minds and bodies (not even ones own) exist.Are there other minds, or other bodies? — Harry Hindu
lol, so anti-realism defeats itself by rejecting it's own existence as a belief? A non-existent nihilist? :lol:Only actual antirealist position I can think of is outright nihilism, and from what I understand of that, no, minds and bodies (not even ones own) exist. — noAxioms
What do you mean by, "'existence of an objective reality" to say that it is meaningless?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
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
And this is I think a very salient point; for how can one explain the astonishing degree of agreement between you and I and Aunty Millie and Fred over there, if there is no 'reality' that is somehow shared by us all?
Two possibilities occur to me, neither of them very palatable. Perhaps me and Aunty Millie and Fred over there are your creations, you being all that there is. Or perhaps you and me and Auntie Millie and Fred over there all partake in some 'overmind' that sets us up to think much the same thing. Solipsism or panpsychism. — Banno
Cognitive Psychologist Don Hoffman is not an anti-realist, according to your definition. But he has written a book, The Case Against Reality, which uses your analogy of a TV or computer screen with graphic symbols (icons) that stand in place of a more complex underlying Reality. You may find that his "hidden realism" is similar to your own "mental" reality. :smile:Reality would be like a TV screen with no actual substance behind what you see. — Michael McMahon
That's the thin version. There's a bit more to it than that. It's more about the meaning of propositions than about the reality of the objects around us.
A realist might say that "Here is a cat" will be true exactly if there is a cat, here. The cat is independent of the utterance, and will be there whether the utterance is made or not, and indeed independently of the meaning of the utterance.
An antirealist might rather say that the truth of "Here is a cat" depends at least to some extent on the circumstances in which the utterance takes place, especially the way the utterance is used to 'carve up' the world; so to some extent for the antirealist there is only a cat if we all decide that's how we will talk... — Banno
Given those two choices, I can't even imagine anyone actually being an antirealist.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". — Michael McMahon
A needle in a haystack — Michael McMahon
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