I believe that reality exists independently of our observation, or else nothing makes sense. — Brendan Golledge
What do you think? — Ayush Jain
I believe that reality exists independently of our observation, or else nothing makes sense. — Brendan Golledge
As we keep imagining and exploring, the universe unravels itself. In your day to day life, I don't think the black hole sitting in the center of our galaxy has any direct impact. you will be indifferent to its existence.
But its there now since somebody has observed it. If nobody would have, it might or might not have existed?
All of these thoughts intrigue me a lot. What do you think? — Ayush Jain
If you say that reality exists only when we observe it, isn't that like saying that we're living in a video game where the map is loaded only whenever we try to look at it? It seems bizarre. Everything is so consistent in nature, and it behaves as if it's much older than humanity. It would seem to be very strange if it worked that way. — Brendan Golledge
Isn't truth property of our judgement on the world? — Corvus
No. Truth is what simply is. Whether you know it or not is irrelevant. — Philosophim
Throw a ball in the air, and it returns to the Earth. Knowing gravity is irrelevant. Knowing some languages call it 'a ball' is irrelevant. Believing it won't come back to Earth is irrelevant. Reality, or truth, is that the ball comes back to Earth. It doesn't matter if you're there to witness it or not. Truth is what is, and it is what is regardless of what you know or believe. — Philosophim
What is the point of saying something is truth, when you don't know anything about it? Isn't it a senseless absurdity? — Corvus
You seemed to be confusing some mundane unobserved events with truth. — Corvus
Unobserved events or existence is not in the category of truth. — Corvus
Truth means statements or propositions which corresponds to the existence or events in reality. — Corvus
Truth is 'what is', and 'what is' exists does not rely on our statements. — Philosophim
Truth is about something concrete, and corresponds to the reality, which all intelligible can witness, verify, understand, share and agree in their minds. — Corvus
Let me refine this as well. What is true may not necessarily be intelligible. Generally we call these statements "Knowledge". What is known is that which all intelligible can witness, verify, understand, share, and agree in their minds. Even then, there are some things such as subjective experience which can only be known to the individual. — Philosophim
Yes. Any number of people, none of whom know each other, can, all at different times, be rendered unconscious and taken to the same place, a place which none of them had ever heard of before, and take photographs, draw pictures, or write down descriptions of whatever objects they see. What would it mean if all of the photos, drawings, and descriptions matched?I believe that reality exists independently of our observation, or else nothing makes sense. — Brendan Golledge
It seems to be getting more unclear. One thing clear with truth is, if one doesn't know what he is talking about, then he cannot be telling truth. — Corvus
"1+1=2!" They don't know what they're talking about, but is what the kid said untrue? — Philosophim
You shouldn't expect kids with no education and no development in the intelligence to the adult level to be able to tell the analytic truth. — Corvus
I don't agree. My point is that you seem to be confusing, claiming that facts and existence are identical to truths. They are not truths themselves. Truth is our judgement from reasoning on the facts, existence and events, and also statements and propositions regarding those entities.But if you're starting to avoid direct answers and coming up with odd asides, we've probably reached the end of a decent conversation. — Philosophim
Thanks. You too.Have a good day. — Philosophim
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