I don't know if there is a True, or Prime, reality. If there is, I don't know if the event is in that category. But if we take it as the starting point, then would the dream or memory of the event be True-1? Actually, the dream of the event wouldn't exist if there wasn't a memory of it. So the memory is True-1, and the dream is -2.When I dream of something that's happened before while the dream is real it makes sense to me to say that it's less real than the event I experienced. And the memory of the event could likewise be thought of as less real. — Moliere
And therein lies a considerable proportion of semiotics, among other things. — Wayfarer
I can make no sense at all of "degrees of reality". Reality is not something that can be measured, the idea 'real' is the binary opposition to 'iimaginary' or 'artificial'. Something cannot be partly real and partly imaginary or artificial in its wholeness. — Janus
I am little surprised that so far no one has suggested another approach ― maybe again because it tends to be treated as a binary. That would be claims that there is a hidden reality, a deeper reality than the one we know. I suppose people don't usually say that makes this one less real, but simply illusion. Always the binary. But if there's a reality behind or beyond this one, couldn't there be another behind that? Why assume there are exactly two, rather than admit that if there's more than one, there may be any number? In which case, it seems to me more natural to assume such realities are on a spectrum. (Even scientists sometimes seem to talk this way, if not in terms of reality then in terms of "what's going on": it seems to us one thing, but it's really something else; and behind that there's something even stranger; and we don't know what's behind that, but maybe the universe is a simulation, or a calculation, or something else quite different from what we expected a hundred years ago.) — Srap Tasmaner
Moral: “real” doesn’t have any single meaning whose correct application you can argue about. — J
Not quite in the spirit of the enterprise though. — Srap Tasmaner
I think, in discussing why we say mortality is a property of Socrates rather than saying Socrates is an exemplar of Mortality.) — Srap Tasmaner
The more reality or being a thing has, the greater the number of its attributes (Def. iv.). — Spinoza, Ethics Book 1,Prop IX
: for nothing in nature is more clear than that each and every entity must be conceived under some attribute, and that its reality or being is in proportion to the number of its attributes expressing necessity or eternity and infinity — Spinoza, Ethics Book 1, Prop X, note
Yes, I'm talking about Forms. Why not say Mortality is manifested in, among others, this little temporal object called "Socrates", but Mortality is itself more enduring, more perfect, more real than such objects? — Srap Tasmaner
What's the answer when you've got one property and you're measuring how well something exemplifies it? — fdrake
One predicate to rule them all, one scale with which to measure being — Srap Tasmaner
If your intent is to make shit up, it's an excellent scale, imposing minimal constraint on your creativity. "Like our Heavenly Father, Everest is great ..." — Srap Tasmaner
There really is no deciding between the world being one or being many, and some of this overlaps that. I think. — Srap Tasmaner
I think the latter idea, parametrising individuation, is about as close as you get. But you still need a background of individuating processes for it. The origin point is an analytical posit rather than an ontological ground. — fdrake
And therein lies a considerable proportion of semiotics, among other things.
— Wayfarer
Could you spell this out a bit? — Srap Tasmaner
I am little surprised that so far no one has suggested another approach ― maybe again because it tends to be treated as a binary. That would be claims that there is a hidden reality, a deeper reality than the one we know. I suppose people don't usually say that makes this one less real, but simply illusion. — Srap Tasmaner
And so the question remains ― and I suppose this is for you, Wayfarer ― whether the great chain of being and related ontologies are inherently religious in nature. — Srap Tasmaner
Two readings of that idiom come to mind: (a) some of what you say is true, and some of it is false; (b) some of the truth is encompassed by what you say, but some of it isn't. — Srap Tasmaner
There is some truth in natural science, according to him, but not the whole truth, and not because we're just not finished, but because we are excluding something important. More than not looking for it, when we stumble across it, we push it back out. — Srap Tasmaner
There is some truth in natural science, according to him, but not the whole truth, and not because we're just not finished, but because we are excluding something important. More than not looking for it, when we stumble across it, we push it back out. — Srap Tasmaner
Now if you hold such a view, your ontology of the entities in this "plane" might also be hierarchical, because some creatures are sensible of the other reality (or realities) and some aren't. — Srap Tasmaner
I do really like the idea of trying to come up with a continuous graduation reality concept, which isn't an accuracy of a representation, or a way of counting things that already apply, or a way of saying how individuated an entity is. But I don't think it's possible, honestly. — fdrake
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