The crucial point is that mind is dependent on reality for realists, and as such, an ideal theory is constrained by reality. — Marchesk
A Realist believes that it is possible, even if it is difficult, to obtain true depictions of reality. — darthbarracuda
But the anti-realist is denying that things are real, in the metaphysical or ontological sense, thus it's confusing to use that language. — Marchesk
They're denying that there is a real world, only the world as it appears to us. — Marchesk
Mind-dependent/subjective/verification-immanent things are nonetheless real. — Michael
They're saying that the world as it appears to us is the real world. — Michael
Yeah, sure, dreams are real too, in that people do have dreams. But they're also not real, as in the things I dream about aren't part of the world. They didn't happen, except as a dream. Same with imagination. So we don't say that dreams or imagination are real. That's abusing language, even though it's true that people do imagine and dream. — Marchesk
If they're not mind-independent, then why call them real? — Marchesk
The realist thinks the distinction between appearances and reality is important, because there is a real world beyond appearances. The anti-realist denies this.
It is anti-realism, which means opposed to realism. So it's really strange to want to hold on to the word "reality" in such a discussion.
Because they are real. — Michael
Yes. The anti-realist says that the real world is what appears, not something else. — Michael
The disagreement is over the separation of the real world and the empirical world. — Michael
To be an anti-realist is to be opposed to metaphysical realism. It's not to be opposed to the existence of reality. — Michael
But they're not real, as in they're not mind-independent. Which is what real means in context of this discussion.
But it is, by definition. Reality entails mind-independence. — Marchesk
If the real world is what appears, and the anti-realist isn't a naive realist, then the anti-realist is talking about appearances.
I'm not sure about that, since direct realists and scientific realists might disagree. The disagreement then would be over whether the empirical world is mind-independent.
"Real" doesn't mean "mind-independent". My dreams are real dreams but they're not mind-independent dreams. — Michael
But in context of metaphysical realism, realists mean mind-independence when talking about reality. Anti-realists mean something different if/when they wish to use the word "reality". — Marchesk
And the discussion can become a never ending argument over what is meant by "real". — Marchesk
Well, yes. That's the disagreement; over what it means for a tree to be real. — Michael
And the reason is because someone wants to use the other side's terminology, but with different meaning, and then a big argument ensues over who which side has the right to use the terminology.
The realist doesn't have ownership over the word "real". "Reality" isn't realist terminology. It's English terminology. — Michael
But in context of metaphysical realism, the realist does get ownership over the word "real', because they are espousing realism. — Marchesk
"Realism" and "real" mean different things. The realist is free to tell us what "realism" means but not what "real " means. — Michael
The realist is certainly free to use "reality" to mean mind-independence, or verification transcendence, or whatever to mean that the world is independent of our perceptions, conceptual schemes, linguistic practices. — Marchesk
The anti-realist might not wish to use the word "real" that way, but that's what the realist means, so it's bordering on absurd to argue over what the realist means when employing use of the word "reality".
What I said was that the anti-realist will also say that an ideal theory is constrained by reality. — Michael
"The crucial point is that mind is dependent on a mind-independent world for realists, and as such, an ideal theory is constrained by a mind-independent world."
Yes, that seems like an accurate description of realism. — Michael
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