Reality vs Sense: Ideas on What Makes Something Real

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on the philosophical question of what constitutes reality beyond sensory perception. Participants explore the implications of empiricism and rationalism, the influence of belief and conditioning on perceptions of reality, and references to literature that addresses these themes.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant questions whether we are entirely dependent on our senses to understand reality, suggesting that alternate realities may exist beyond our perception.
  • Another participant references the philosophical divide between empiricism, which relies on sensory experience for proof, and rationalism, which emphasizes abstract thought and ideas.
  • A different viewpoint highlights the role of gullibility in shaping perceptions of reality, arguing that beliefs instilled from a young age can lead to accepting falsehoods as reality if they go unchallenged.
  • A participant mentions "Eight Lectures On Yoga" by Aleister Crowley, noting its exploration of the interpretation of sensory experiences and the psychological factors that influence perceptions of reality.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the nature of reality and the role of sensory perception, indicating that multiple competing perspectives remain without consensus.

Contextual Notes

Some discussions involve assumptions about the reliability of senses and the influence of conditioning on beliefs, which remain unresolved.

einsteinian77
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Would anyone like to share ideas on what makes something real other than what our senses tell us to believe? Or are we completely dependent on our senses so that even if there was an alternate reality we would never wittness it as it really is. I know this sounds like something straight out of the matrix but I think its a fundametal question of philosophy regardless.
 
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It is a fundamental question in philosophy history.

ie The empiricism vs rationalism. Empiricism goes to experience or senses for proof. Rationalism( The classic divide is Locke, Berkeley, and Hume as empiricists. And Descartes, (Spinoza), and Leibniz as rationalists) goes to numbers, thoughts, ideas.

Personally I have a very slight suspect that thinking (abstract) isn't really something rational, outside sensing, but rather another sense, like listening, seeing, etc. But it's all guessing.
 
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Well i'd have to say gullibility has a lot to do with what we consider reality. Because certain things have been beaten into our minds ever since we were too young to doubt. A intellectually limited child may go its whole life believing that the moon was made of cheese if the child had no proof that said otherwise.

ie if nobody knows the truth, or can prove it then the lie is reality because nobody can 'sense' the difference
 
Eight Lectures On Yoga

A great book which deals with the perception of reality is "Eight Lectures On Yoga" by Aleister Crowley.
It goes into some great detail about the interpreatation of electrical impulses to the brain, the illusion of colour etc. One must remember this book was published many years before the Matrix etc.
Another classic example in the book is the way Crowley explains about the perceptions of human character and form, and their permeability depending on conditioning, memory and preceonception.
Psychology for the advanced.
 

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