"Possible"? Yeah, there isn't a contradiction entailed in doing so, as I think my own (perhaps insufficiently rigorous) attempts show:Is it possible to give a rigorous definition of 'reality'? — Cidat
The Real – the ineluctable, encompassing horizon (that exhausts – exceeds – categories, concepts, symbolic systems (e.g. randomness, void)).
Reality – the ground, including logical / phase-spaces (i.e. reason), encompassed [by the encompassing horizon (i.e. the real)]. — 180 Proof
The real is that which hurts you badly, often fatally, when you don't respect it, and is as unavoidable as it consists in whatever preceeds-resists-exceeds all (of our) rational categories and techniques of control (e.g. ambiguity, transfinitude, contingency, uncertainty, randomness). The real encompasses reason (Jaspers) and itself cannot be encompassed (Spinoza / Cantor) ... like that 'void within which all atoms swirl' (Epicurus). — 180 Proof
The real is that which hurts you badly, often fatally, when you don't respect it, and is as unavoidable as it consists in whatever preceeds-resists-exceeds all (of our) rational categories and techniques of control (e.g. ambiguity, transfinitude, contingency, uncertainty, randomness). The real encompasses reason (Jaspers) and itself cannot be encompassed (Spinoza / Cantor) ... like that 'void within which all atoms swirl' (Epicurus). — 180 Proof
Is it possible to give a rigorous definition of 'reality'? — Cidat
:fire:"Here we find sanctity which shames our religions and reality which discredits our heroes. Here we find nature to be circumstance, which dwarfs all other circumstance, and judges like a god all men that come to her."
I once stood on a chair shaped rock where a friend died in the remote wilderness of northern British Columbia. I looked out over what he looked out as he died and Emerson is all that came to mind. — James Riley
There is no ‘universal’ meaning that isn’t subject to differing interpretations due to differing subjective and contextual items. — I like sushi
The real is that which hurts you badly, often fatally, when you don't respect it — 180 Proof
Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away. — Philip K. Dick
Yes.In other words, reality just is and no amount of mental manipulation/acrobatics can/will alter/affect it. Reality then is that which you have to accept. — TheMadFool
Ah, but now did you not just do the same? — Outlander
The Real – the ineluctable, encompassing horizon (that exhausts – exceeds – categories, concepts, symbolic systems (e.g. randomness, void)).
Reality – the ground, including logical / phase-spaces (i.e. reason), encompassed [by the encompassing horizon (i.e. the real)]. — 180 Proof
No. Only fictions (or mere possibilities) are "unreal". Reality – this or that reality (i.e. configuration of facts) – is contingent: necessarily change-able (or non-necessary, in the sense that it is (always at every moment) possible for 'a reality' to come-to-be or continue-to-be or cease-to-be); and this radical, inherently necessary contingency is (my conception of) the real. (E.g. vide classical atomists (re: void), Spinoza, Jaspers, Rosset, Meillassoux-Brassier.)You differentiate between the real, and reality. Does this mean reality is unreal? — Yohan
As Spinoza does, think geometrically
(re: 'ground & horizon' ... encompassed & encompassing, respectively.) — 180 Proof
The Real – the ineluctable, encompassing horizon (that exhausts – exceeds – categories, concepts, symbolic systems (e.g. randomness, void)). — 180 Proof
Per Wikipedia: "For the Nondualists, maya is thus that cosmic force that presents the infinite brahman (the supreme being) as the finite phenomenal world. "Reality – the ground, including logical / phase-spaces (i.e. reason), encompassed [by the encompassing horizon (i.e. the real)]. — 180 Proof
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