The Insides and Outsides of 'Reality': Exploring Possibilities — Author
Consensus is one measure, but even that may be called into question by shared delusions. However, he also refers to the science fiction writer, Philip K Dick's view that 'reality is that which, if you stop believing in it does not go away'. Leaving aside the nature of impermanence, Dick's argument does hold as an important marker — Author
In writing about virtual worlds in Reality +: Virtual Worlds and the Problems of Philosophy, philosopher David Chalmers offers some methods by which we can tell what is real. He outlines five ways: reality as existence, reality as causal power, reality as mind independence, reality as non-illusoriness, and reality as genuineness. — Psychology Today
Reality as mind independence: “Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn’t go away,” said Philip K. Dick. A better explanation, Chalmers offers, is perhaps “Reality is that which doesn’t depend on anyone’s mind for its existence.” But as we’ve seen in Anil Seth’s TED talk, apparently, we are all hallucinating the same reality. So who is to say the reality exists outside of our collective consciousness? The characters in our favorite television shows are not necessarily real, and they don't necessarily go away when you turn the TV off. But perhaps we can agree that they wouldn't exist if it were not for our ability to conjure up the character in the first place. — As above
So many -ism's.There are many positions on understanding reality, including realism, idealism, materialism and phenomenonalism. — Author
An idealist interpretation of quantum physics has been challenged byDonald Hoffmann(2025). He takes on board the questionable issue of there being an absolute objective reality, but is wary of lopsided thinking.
How on earth...where do you begin... but you decide to digress. How frustrating not to say more.He suggests a possible interface between subjectivity and objectivity, involving 'trying to solve the hard problem of consciousness by building a theory in which the underlying reality emerges from a vast network of interacting agents and their experiences. — Author
Colin Stott(2025) has pointed to MacMurray's claim that Western academic philosophy has 'dug itself into a hole', through ignoring embodiment as an aspect of perception. Stott suggests that this involved taking 'fundamental conceptual pairings, such as subjective/objective, thought/action, individual/society, theory/practice and severed them...' — Author
Yet, despite the partiality of observation, and thinking, it is possible to build a composite picture. But, even then, as Hoffman argues, it is not possible to go beyond human subjective experience entirely as a framework of complete objectivity. Of course, there is the potential of AI, I guess, but that is likely modelled on anthropocentric models and understanding. — Author
Also, as a closing remark, it is worth bearing in mind the possible limits of quantum physics and the linguistics of science. As Strassler(2025), claims 'The language we use in physics obscures some of our most beautiful and fascinating discoveries.' — Author
One main problem with this essay on the forum is that it is an area so hotly debated within philosophy. It is rather unfortunate that it is onsite while the thread on 'what is reality? is going so strongly. This may mean that hardly anyone will read it all, because that thread has grown so long. To say less or more about the idea of reality is the question? — Jack Cummins
The ongoing dialogue between science and philosophical reflection may give some 'breathing space' for synthesis of ideas and perspectives. — Moliere
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