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Reality

Reality is the sum or aggregate of all that is real or existent within the universe, as opposed to that which is only imaginary, nonexistent or nonactual. The term is also used to refer to the ontological status of things, indicating their existence.[1] In physical terms, reality is the totality of a system, known and unknown.[2]

Philosophical questions about the nature of reality or existence or being are considered under the rubric of ontology, which is a major branch of metaphysics in the Western philosophical tradition. Ontological questions also feature in diverse branches of philosophy, including the philosophy of science, of religion, of mathematics, and philosophical logic. These include questions about whether only physical objects are real (i.e., physicalism), whether reality is fundamentally immaterial (e.g. idealism), whether hypothetical unobservable entities posited by scientific theories exist, whether a 'God' exists, whether numbers and other abstract objects exist, and whether possible worlds exist. Epistemology is concerned with what can be known or inferred as likely and how, whereby in the modern world emphasis is put on reason, empirical evidence and science as sources and methods to determine or investigate reality.

World views

World views and theories

A common colloquial usage would have reality mean "perceptions, beliefs, and attitudes toward reality", as in "My reality is not your reality." This is often used just as a colloquialism indicating that the parties to a conversation agree, or should agree, not to quibble over deeply different conceptions of what is real. For example, in a religious discussion between friends, one might say (attempting humor), "You might disagree, but in my reality, everyone goes to heaven."

Reality can be defined in a way that links it to worldviews or parts of them (conceptual frameworks): Reality is the totality of all things, structures (actual and conceptual), events (past and present) and phenomena, whether observable or not. It is what a world view (whether it be based on individual or shared human experience) ultimately attempts to describe or map.

A worldview or a world-view or Weltanschauung is the fundamental cognitive orientation of an individual or society encompassing the whole of the individual's or society's knowledge, culture, and point of view.[3] A worldview can include natural philosophy; fundamental, existential, and normative postulates; or themes, values, emotions, and ethics.[4]

Certain ideas from physics, philosophy, sociology, literary criticism, and other fields shape various theories of reality. One such theory is that there simply and literally is no reality beyond the perceptions or beliefs we each have about reality.[citation needed] Such attitudes are summarized in popular statements, such as "Perception is reality" or "Life is how you perceive reality" or "reality is what you can get away with" (Robert Anton Wilson), and they indicate anti-realism – that is, the view that there is no objective reality, whether acknowledged explicitly or not.

Many of the concepts of science and philosophy are often defined culturally and socially. This idea was elaborated by Thomas Kuhn in his book The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962). The Social Construction of Reality, a book about the sociology of knowledge written by Peter L. Berger and Thomas Luckmann, was published in 1966. It explained how knowledge is acquired and used for the comprehension of reality. Out of all the realities, the reality of everyday life is the most important one since our consciousness requires us to be completely aware and attentive to the experience of everyday life.

Related concepts

A priori and a posteriori

A priori ('from the earlier') and a posteriori ('from the later') are Latin phrases used in philosophy to distinguish types of knowledge, justification, or argument by their reliance on experience. A priori knowledge is independent from any experience. Examples include mathematics,[5] tautologies and deduction from pure reason.[6] A posteriori knowledge depends on empirical evidence. Examples include most fields of science and aspects of personal knowledge.

Potentiality and actuality

In philosophy, potentiality and actuality[7] are a pair of closely connected principles which Aristotle used to analyze motion, causality, ethics, and physiology in his Physics, Metaphysics, Nicomachean Ethics, and De Anima.[8]

The concept of potentiality, in this context, generally refers to any "possibility" that a thing can be said to have. Aristotle did not consider all possibilities the same, and emphasized the importance of those that become real of their own accord when conditions are right and nothing stops them.[9]

Actuality, in contrast to potentiality, is the motion, change or activity that represents an exercise or fulfillment of a possibility, when a possibility becomes real in the fullest sense.[10]

Belief

A belief is a subjective attitude that a proposition is true or a state of affairs is the case. A subjective attitude is a mental state of having some stance, take, or opinion about something.[11] In epistemology, philosophers use the term "belief" to refer to attitudes about the world which can be either true or false.[12] To believe something is to take it to be true; for instance, to believe that snow is white is comparable to accepting the truth of the proposition "snow is white". However, holding a belief does not require active introspection. For example, few individuals carefully consider whether or not the sun will rise tomorrow, simply assuming that it will. Moreover, beliefs need not be occurrent (e.g. a person actively thinking "snow is white"), but can instead be dispositional (e.g. a person who if asked about the color of snow would assert "snow is white").[12]

There are various ways that contemporary philosophers have tried to describe beliefs, including as representations of ways that the world could be (Jerry Fodor), as dispositions to act as if certain things are true (Roderick Chisholm), as interpretive schemes for making sense of someone's actions (Daniel Dennett and Donald Davidson), or as mental states that fill a particular function (Hilary Putnam).[12] Some have also attempted to offer significant revisions to our notion of belief, including eliminativists about belief who argue that there is no phenomenon in the natural world which corresponds to our folk psychological concept of belief (Paul Churchland) and formal epistemologists who aim to replace our bivalent notion of belief ("either we have a belief or we don't have a belief") with the more permissive, probabilistic notion of credence ("there is an entire spectrum of degrees of belief, not a simple dichotomy between belief and non-belief").[12][13]

Beliefs are the subject of various important philosophical debates. Notable examples include: "What is the rational way to revise one's beliefs when presented with various sorts of evidence?", "Is the content of our beliefs entirely determined by our mental states, or do the relevant facts have any bearing on our beliefs (e.g. if I believe that I'm holding a glass of water, is the non-mental fact that water is H2O part of the content of that belief)?", "How fine-grained or coarse-grained are our beliefs?", and "Must it be possible for a belief to be expressible in language, or are there non-linguistic beliefs?"[12]

Belief studies

 
Socio-demographic correlates of witchcraft beliefs[14]
There is research investigating specific beliefs, types of beliefs and patterns of beliefs. For example, a study estimated contemporary prevalence and associations with belief in witchcraft around the world, which (in its data) varied between 9% and 90% between nations and is still a widespread element in worldviews globally. It also shows associations such as with lower "innovative activity", higher levels of anxiety, lower life expectancy, and higher religiosity.[15][14] Other research is investigating beliefs in misinformation and their resistance to correction, including with respect to misinformation countermeasures. It describes cognitive, social and affective processes that leave people vulnerable to the formation of false beliefs.[16] A study introduced the concept of false social reality which refers to widespread perceptions of public opinion that are shown to be false, such as underestimated general public support in the U.S. for climate change mitigation policies.[17][18] Studies also suggested some uses of psychedelics can shift beliefs in some humans in certain ways, such as increasing attribution of consciousness to various entities (including plants and inanimate objects) and towards panpsychism and fatalism.[19][20]

Western philosophy

Philosophy addresses two different aspects of the topic of reality: the nature of reality itself, and the relationship between the mind (as well as language and culture) and reality.

On the one hand, ontology is the study of being, and the central topic of the field is couched, variously, in terms of being, existence, "what is", and reality. The task in ontology is to describe the most general categories of reality and how they are interrelated. If a philosopher wanted to proffer a positive definition of the concept "reality", it would be done under this heading. As explained above, some philosophers draw a distinction between reality and existence. In fact, many analytic philosophers today tend to avoid the term "real" and "reality" in discussing ontological issues. But for those who would treat "is real" the same way they treat "exists", one of the leading questions of analytic philosophy has been whether existence (or reality) is a property of objects. It has been widely held by analytic philosophers that it is not a property at all, though this view has lost some ground in recent decades.

On the other hand, particularly in discussions of objectivity that have feet in both metaphysics and epistemology, philosophical discussions of "reality" often concern the ways in which reality is, or is not, in some way dependent upon (or, to use fashionable jargon, "constructed" out of) mental and cultural factors such as perceptions, beliefs, and other mental states, as well as cultural artifacts, such as religions and political movements, on up to the vague notion of a common cultural world view, or Weltanschauung.

Realism

The view that there is a reality independent of any beliefs, perceptions, etc., is called realism. More specifically, philosophers are given to speaking about "realism about" this and that, such as realism about universals or realism about the external world. Generally, where one can identify any class of object, the existence or essential characteristics of which is said not to depend on perceptions, beliefs, language, or any other human artifact, one can speak of "realism about" that object.

A correspondence theory of knowledge about what exists claims that "true" knowledge of reality represents accurate correspondence of statements about and images of reality with the actual reality that the statements or images are attempting to represent. For example, the scientific method can verify that a statement is true based on the observable evidence that a thing exists. Many humans can point to the Rocky Mountains and say that this mountain range exists, and continues to exist even if no one is observing it or making statements about it.

Anti-realism

One can also speak of anti-realism about the same objects. Anti-realism is the latest in a long series of terms for views opposed to realism. Perhaps the first was idealism, so called because reality was said to be in the mind, or a product of our ideas. Berkeleyan idealism is the view, propounded by the Irish empiricist George Berkeley, that the objects of perception are actually ideas in the mind. In this view, one might be tempted to say that reality is a "mental construct"; this is not quite accurate, however, since, in Berkeley's view, perceptual ideas are created and coordinated by God. By the 20th century, views similar to Berkeley's were called phenomenalism. Phenomenalism differs from Berkeleyan idealism primarily in that Berkeley believed that minds, or souls, are not merely ideas nor made up of ideas, whereas varieties of phenomenalism, such as that advocated by Russell, tended to go farther to say that the mind itself is merely a collection of perceptions, memories, etc., and that there is no mind or soul over and above such mental events. Finally, anti-realism became a fashionable term for any view which held that the existence of some object depends upon the mind or cultural artifacts. The view that the so-called external world is really merely a social, or cultural, artifact, called social constructionism, is one variety of anti-realism. Cultural relativism is the view that social issues such as morality are not absolute, but at least partially cultural artifact.

Being

The nature of being is a perennial topic in metaphysics. For instance, Parmenides taught that reality was a single unchanging Being, whereas Heraclitus wrote that all things flow. The 20th-century philosopher Heidegger thought previous philosophers have lost sight of the question of Being (qua Being) in favour of the questions of beings (existing things), so he believed that a return to the Parmenidean approach was needed. An ontological catalogue is an attempt to list the fundamental constituents of reality. The question of whether or not existence is a predicate has been discussed since the Early Modern period, not least in relation to the ontological argument for the existence of God. Existence, that something is, has been contrasted with essence, the question of what something is. Since existence without essence seems blank, it associated with nothingness by philosophers such as Hegel. Nihilism represents an extremely negative view of being, the absolute a positive one.

Explanations for the existence of something rather than nothing

"Why is there anything at all?" or "why is there something rather than nothing?" is a question about the reason for basic existence which has been raised or commented on by a range of philosophers and physicists, including Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz,[21] Ludwig Wittgenstein,[22] and Martin Heidegger,[23] who called it "the fundamental question of metaphysics".[24][25][26]

Perception

The question of direct or "naïve" realism, as opposed to indirect or "representational" realism, arises in the philosophy of perception and of mind out of the debate over the nature of conscious experience;[27][28] the epistemological question of whether the world we see around us is the real world itself or merely an internal perceptual copy of that world generated by neural processes in our brain. Naïve realism is known as direct realism when developed to counter indirect or representative realism, also known as epistemological dualism,[29] the philosophical position that our conscious experience is not of the real world itself but of an internal representation, a miniature virtual-reality replica of the world.

Timothy Leary coined the influential term Reality Tunnel, by which he means a kind of representative realism. The theory states that, with a subconscious set of mental filters formed from their beliefs and experiences, every individual interprets the same world differently, hence "Truth is in the eye of the beholder". His ideas influenced the work of his friend Robert Anton Wilson.

Abstract objects and mathematics

The status of abstract entities, particularly numbers, is a topic of discussion in mathematics.

In the philosophy of mathematics, the best known form of realism about numbers is Platonic realism, which grants them abstract, immaterial existence. Other forms of realism identify mathematics with the concrete physical universe.

Anti-realist stances include formalism and fictionalism.

Some approaches are selectively realistic about some mathematical objects but not others. Finitism rejects infinite quantities. Ultra-finitism accepts finite quantities up to a certain amount. Constructivism and intuitionism are realistic about objects that can be explicitly constructed, but reject the use of the principle of the excluded middle to prove existence by reductio ad absurdum.

The traditional debate has focused on whether an abstract (immaterial, intelligible) realm of numbers has existed in addition to the physical (sensible, concrete) world. A recent development is the mathematical universe hypothesis, the theory that only a mathematical world exists, with the finite, physical world being an illusion within it.

An extreme form of realism about mathematics is the mathematical multiverse hypothesis advanced by Max Tegmark. Tegmark's sole postulate is: All structures that exist mathematically also exist physically. That is, in the sense that "in those [worlds] complex enough to contain self-aware substructures [they] will subjectively perceive themselves as existing in a physically 'real' world".[30][31] The hypothesis suggests that worlds corresponding to different sets of initial conditions, physical constants, or altogether different equations should be considered real. The theory can be considered a form of Platonism in that it posits the existence of mathematical entities, but can also be considered a mathematical monism in that it denies that anything exists except mathematical objects.

Properties

The problem of universals is an ancient problem in metaphysics about whether universals exist. Universals are general or abstract qualities, characteristics, properties, kinds or relations, such as being male/female, solid/liquid/gas or a certain colour,[32] that can be predicated of individuals or particulars or that individuals or particulars can be regarded as sharing or participating in. For example, Scott, Pat, and Chris have in common the universal quality of being human or humanity.

The realist school claims that universals are real – they exist and are distinct from the particulars that instantiate them. There are various forms of realism. Two major forms are Platonic realism and Aristotelian realism.[33] Platonic realism is the view that universals are real entities and they exist independent of particulars. Aristotelian realism, on the other hand, is the view that universals are real entities, but their existence is dependent on the particulars that exemplify them.

Nominalism and conceptualism are the main forms of anti-realism about universals.

Time and space

A traditional realist position in ontology is that time and space have existence apart from the human mind. Idealists deny or doubt the existence of objects independent of the mind. Some anti-realists whose ontological position is that objects outside the mind do exist, nevertheless doubt the independent existence of time and space.

Kant, in the Critique of Pure Reason, described time as an a priori notion that, together with other a priori notions such as space, allows us to comprehend sense experience. Kant denies that either space or time are substance, entities in themselves, or learned by experience; he holds rather that both are elements of a systematic framework we use to structure our experience. Spatial measurements are used to quantify how far apart objects are, and temporal measurements are used to quantitatively compare the interval between (or duration of) events. Although space and time are held to be transcendentally ideal in this sense, they are also empirically real, i.e. not mere illusions.

Idealist writers such as J. M. E. McTaggart in The Unreality of Time have argued that time is an illusion.

As well as differing about the reality of time as a whole, metaphysical theories of time can differ in their ascriptions of reality to the past, present and future separately.

  • Presentism holds that the past and future are unreal, and only an ever-changing present is real.
  • The block universe theory, also known as Eternalism, holds that past, present and future are all real, but the passage of time is an illusion. It is often said to have a scientific basis in relativity.
  • The growing block universe theory holds that past and present are real, but the future is not.

Time, and the related concepts of process and evolution are central to the system-building metaphysics of A. N. Whitehead and Charles Hartshorne.

Possible worlds

The term "possible world" goes back to Leibniz's theory of possible worlds, used to analyse necessity, possibility, and similar modal notions. Modal realism is the view, notably propounded by David Kellogg Lewis, that all possible worlds are as real as the actual world. In short: the actual world is regarded as merely one among an infinite set of logically possible worlds, some "nearer" to the actual world and some more remote. Other theorists may use the Possible World framework to express and explore problems without committing to it ontologically. Possible world theory is related to alethic logic: a proposition is necessary if it is true in all possible worlds, and possible if it is true in at least one. The many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics is a similar idea in science.

Theories of everything (TOE) and philosophy

The philosophical implications of a physical TOE are frequently debated. For example, if philosophical physicalism is true, a physical TOE will coincide with a philosophical theory of everything.

The "system building" style of metaphysics attempts to answer all the important questions in a coherent way, providing a complete picture of the world. Plato and Aristotle could be said to be early examples of comprehensive systems. In the early modern period (17th and 18th centuries), the system-building scope of philosophy is often linked to the rationalist method of philosophy, that is the technique of deducing the nature of the world by pure a priori reason. Examples from the early modern period include the Leibniz's Monadology, Descartes's Dualism, Spinoza's Monism. Hegel's Absolute idealism and Whitehead's Process philosophy were later systems.

Other philosophers do not believe its techniques can aim so high. Some scientists think a more mathematical approach than philosophy is needed for a TOE, for instance Stephen Hawking wrote in A Brief History of Time that even if we had a TOE, it would necessarily be a set of equations. He wrote, "What is it that breathes fire into the equations and makes a universe for them to describe?"[34]

Phenomenology

On a much broader and more subjective level,[specify] private experiences, curiosity, inquiry, and the selectivity involved in personal interpretation of events shapes reality as seen by one and only one person[35] and hence is called phenomenological. While this form of reality might be common to others as well, it could at times also be so unique to oneself as to never be experienced or agreed upon by anyone else. Much of the kind of experience deemed spiritual occurs on this level of reality.

Phenomenology is a philosophical method developed in the early years of the twentieth century by Edmund Husserl and a circle of followers at the universities of Göttingen and Munich in Germany. Subsequently, phenomenological themes were taken up by philosophers in France, the United States, and elsewhere, often in contexts far removed from Husserl's work.

The word phenomenology comes from the Greek phainómenon, meaning "that which appears", and lógos, meaning "study". In Husserl's conception, phenomenology is primarily concerned with making the structures of consciousness, and the phenomena which appear in acts of consciousness, objects of systematic reflection and analysis. Such reflection was to take place from a highly modified "first person" viewpoint, studying phenomena not as they appear to "my" consciousness, but to any consciousness whatsoever. Husserl believed that phenomenology could thus provide a firm basis for all human knowledge, including scientific knowledge, and could establish philosophy as a "rigorous science".[36]

Husserl's conception of phenomenology has also been criticised and developed by his student and assistant Martin Heidegger, by existentialists like Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Jean-Paul Sartre, and by other philosophers, such as Paul Ricoeur, Emmanuel Levinas, and Dietrich von Hildebrand.[37]

Skeptical hypotheses

 
A brain in a vat that believes it is walking

Skeptical hypotheses in philosophy suggest that reality could be very different from what we think it is; or at least that we cannot prove it is not. Examples include:

  • The "Brain in a vat" hypothesis is cast in scientific terms. It supposes that one might be a disembodied brain kept alive in a vat, and fed false sensory signals. This hypothesis is related to the Matrix hypothesis below.
  • The "Dream argument" of Descartes and Zhuangzi supposes reality to be indistinguishable from a dream.
  • Descartes' Evil demon is a being "as clever and deceitful as he is powerful, who has directed his entire effort to misleading me."
  • The five minute hypothesis (or omphalos hypothesis or Last Thursdayism) suggests that the world was created recently together with records and traces indicating a greater age.
  • Diminished reality refers to artificially diminished reality, not due to limitations of sensory systems but via artificial filters[38]
  • The Matrix hypothesis or Simulated reality hypothesis suggest that we might be inside a computer simulation or virtual reality. Related hypotheses may also involve simulations with signals that allow the inhabitant species in virtual or simulated reality to perceive the external reality.

Non-western ancient philosophy and religion

Jain philosophy

Jain philosophy postulates that seven tattva (truths or fundamental principles) constitute reality.[39] These seven tattva are:[40]

  1. Jīva – The soul which is characterized by consciousness.
  2. Ajīva – The non-soul.
  3. Asrava – Influx of karma.
  4. Bandha – The bondage of karma.
  5. Samvara – Obstruction of the inflow of karmic matter into the soul.
  6. Nirjara – Shedding of karmas.
  7. Moksha – Liberation or Salvation, i.e. the complete annihilation of all karmic matter (bound with any particular soul).

Physical sciences

Scientific realism

Scientific realism is, at the most general level, the view that the world (the universe) described by science (perhaps ideal science) is the real world, as it is, independent of what we might take it to be. Within philosophy of science, it is often framed as an answer to the question "how is the success of science to be explained?" The debate over what the success of science involves centers primarily on the status of entities that are not directly observable discussed by scientific theories. Generally, those who are scientific realists state that one can make reliable claims about these entities (viz., that they have the same ontological status) as directly observable entities, as opposed to instrumentalism. The most used and studied scientific theories today state more or less the truth.

Realism and locality in physics

Realism in the sense used by physicists does not equate to realism in metaphysics.[41] The latter is the claim that the world is mind-independent: that even if the results of a measurement do not pre-exist the act of measurement, that does not require that they are the creation of the observer. Furthermore, a mind-independent property does not have to be the value of some physical variable such as position or momentum. A property can be dispositional (or potential), i.e. it can be a tendency: in the way that glass objects tend to break, or are disposed to break, even if they do not actually break. Likewise, the mind-independent properties of quantum systems could consist of a tendency to respond to particular measurements with particular values with ascertainable probability.[42] Such an ontology would be metaphysically realistic, without being realistic in the physicist's sense of "local realism" (which would require that a single value be produced with certainty).

A closely related term is counterfactual definiteness (CFD), used to refer to the claim that one can meaningfully speak of the definiteness of results of measurements that have not been performed (i.e. the ability to assume the existence of objects, and properties of objects, even when they have not been measured).

Local realism is a significant feature of classical mechanics, of general relativity, and of electrodynamics; but quantum mechanics has shown that quantum entanglement is possible. This was rejected by Einstein, who proposed the EPR paradox, but it was subsequently quantified by Bell's inequalities.[43] If Bell's inequalities are violated, either local realism or counterfactual definiteness must be incorrect; but some physicists dispute that experiments have demonstrated Bell's violations, on the grounds that the sub-class of inhomogeneous Bell inequalities has not been tested or due to experimental limitations in the tests. Different interpretations of quantum mechanics violate different parts of local realism and/or counterfactual definiteness.

The transition from "possible" to "actual" is a major topic of quantum physics, with related theories including quantum darwinism.

Role of "observation" in quantum mechanics

The quantum mind–body problem refers to the philosophical discussions of the mind–body problem in the context of quantum mechanics. Since quantum mechanics involves quantum superpositions, which are not perceived by observers, some interpretations of quantum mechanics place conscious observers in a special position.

The founders of quantum mechanics debated the role of the observer, and of them, Wolfgang Pauli and Werner Heisenberg believed that it was the observer that produced collapse. This point of view, which was never fully endorsed by Niels Bohr, was denounced as mystical and anti-scientific by Albert Einstein. Pauli accepted the term, and described quantum mechanics as lucid mysticism.[44]

Heisenberg and Bohr always described quantum mechanics in logical positivist terms. Bohr also took an active interest in the philosophical implications of quantum theories such as his complementarity, for example.[45] He believed quantum theory offers a complete description of nature, albeit one that is simply ill-suited for everyday experiences – which are better described by classical mechanics and probability. Bohr never specified a demarcation line above which objects cease to be quantum and become classical. He believed that it was not a question of physics, but one of philosophy.

Eugene Wigner reformulated the "Schrödinger's cat" thought experiment as "Wigner's friend" and proposed that the consciousness of an observer is the demarcation line which precipitates collapse of the wave function, independent of any realist interpretation. Commonly known as "consciousness causes collapse", this controversial interpretation of quantum mechanics states that observation by a conscious observer is what makes the wave function collapse. However, this is a minority view among quantum philosophers, considering it a misunderstanding.[46] There are other possible solutions to the "Wigner's friend" thought experiment, which do not require consciousness to be different from other physical processes. Moreover, Wigner shifted to those interpretations in his later years.[47]

Multiverse

The multiverse is the hypothetical set of multiple possible universes (including the historical universe we consistently experience) that together comprise everything that exists: the entirety of space, time, matter, and energy as well as the physical laws and constants that describe them. The term was coined in 1895 by the American philosopher and psychologist William James.[48] In the many-worlds interpretation (MWI), one of the mainstream interpretations of quantum mechanics, there are an infinite number of universes and every possible quantum outcome occurs in at least one universe, albeit there is a debate as to how real the (other) worlds are.

The structure of the multiverse, the nature of each universe within it and the relationship between the various constituent universes, depend on the specific multiverse hypothesis considered. Multiverses have been hypothesized in cosmology, physics, astronomy, religion, philosophy, transpersonal psychology and fiction, particularly in science fiction and fantasy. In these contexts, parallel universes are also called "alternative universes", "quantum universes", "interpenetrating dimensions", "parallel dimensions", "parallel worlds", "alternative realities", "alternative timelines", and "dimensional planes", among others.

In several theories, there is a series of, in some cases infinite, self-sustaining cycles – typically a series of Big Crunches (or Big Bounces). However, the respective universes do not exist at once but are forming or following in a logical order or sequence., with key natural constituents potentially varying between universes (see § Anthropic principle).

Anthropic principle

The anthropic principle, also known as the "observation selection effect",[49] is the hypothesis, first proposed in 1957 by Robert Dicke, that the range of possible observations that could be made about the universe is limited by the fact that observations could happen only in a universe capable of developing intelligent life.[50] Proponents of the anthropic principle argue that it explains why the universe has the age and the fundamental physical constants necessary to accommodate conscious life, since if either had been different, no one would have been around to make observations. Anthropic reasoning is often used to deal with the idea that the universe seems to be finely tuned for the existence of life.[51]

Personal and collective reality

 
White matter tracts within a human brain, as visualized by MRI tractography

Each individual has a different view of reality, with different memories and personal history, knowledge, personality traits and experience.[52] This system, mostly referring to the human brain, affects cognition and behavior and into this complex new knowledge, memories,[53] information, thoughts and experiences are continuously integrated.[54][additional citation(s) needed] The connectomeneural networks/wirings in brains – is thought to be a key factor in human variability in terms of cognition or the way we perceive the world (as a context) and related features or processes.[55][56][57] Sensemaking is the process by which people give meaning to their experiences and make sense of the world they live in. Personal identity is relating to questions like how a unique individual is persisting through time.

Sensemaking and determination of reality also occurs collectively, which is investigated in social epistemology and related approaches. From the collective intelligence perspective, the intelligence of the individual human (and potentially AI entities) is substantially limited and advanced intelligence emerges when multiple entities collaborate over time.[58][additional citation(s) needed] Collective memory is an important component of the social construction of reality[59] and communication and communication-related systems, such as media systems, may also be major components (see #Technology).

Philosophy of perception raises questions based on the evolutionary history of humans' perceptual apparatuses, particularly or especially individuals' physiological senses, described as "[w]e don't see reality — we only see what was useful to see in the past", partly suggesting that "[o]ur species has been so successful not in spite of our inability to see reality but because of it".[60]

Scientific theories of everything

A theory of everything (TOE) is a putative theory of theoretical physics that fully explains and links together all known physical phenomena, and predicts the outcome of any experiment that could be carried out in principle. The theory of everything is also called the final theory.[61] Many candidate theories of everything have been proposed by theoretical physicists during the twentieth century, but none have been confirmed experimentally. The primary problem in producing a TOE is that general relativity and quantum mechanics are hard to unify. This is one of the unsolved problems in physics.

Initially, the term "theory of everything" was used with an ironic connotation to refer to various overgeneralized theories. For example, a great-grandfather of Ijon Tichy, a character from a cycle of Stanisław Lem's science fiction stories of the 1960s, was known to work on the "General Theory of Everything". Physicist John Ellis[62] claims to have introduced the term into the technical literature in an article in Nature in 1986.[63] Over time, the term stuck in popularizations of quantum physics to describe a theory that would unify or explain through a single model the theories of all fundamental interactions and of all particles of nature: general relativity for gravitation, and the standard model of elementary particle physics – which includes quantum mechanics – for electromagnetism, the two nuclear interactions, and the known elementary particles.

Current candidates for a theory of everything include string theory, M theory, and loop quantum gravity.

Technology

Media

Media – such as news media, social media, websites including Wikipedia,[64] and fiction[65] – shape individuals' and society's perception of reality (including as part of belief and attitude formation)[65] and are partly used intentionally as means to learn about reality. Various technologies have changed society's relationship with reality such as the advent of radio and TV technologies.

Research investigates interrelations and effects, for example aspects in the social construction of reality.[66] A major component of this shaping and representation of perceived reality is agenda, selection and prioritization – not only (or primarily) the quality, tone and types of content – which influences, for instance, the public agenda.[67][68] Disproportional news attention for low-probability incidents – such as high-consequence accidents – can distort audiences' risk perceptions with harmful consequences.[69] Various biases such as false balance, public attention dependence reactions like sensationalism and domination by "current events",[70] as well as various interest-driven uses of media such as marketing can also have major impacts on the perception of reality. Time-use studies found that e.g. in 2018 the average U.S. American "spent around eleven hours every day looking at screens".[71]

Filter bubbles and echo chambers

A filter bubble or ideological frame is a state of intellectual isolation[72] that can result from personalized searches, recommendation systems, and algorithmic curation. The search results are based on information about the user, such as their location, past click-behavior, and search history.[73] Consequently, users become separated from information that disagrees with their viewpoints, effectively isolating them in their own cultural or ideological bubbles, resulting in a limited and customized view of the world.[74] The choices made by these algorithms are only sometimes transparent.[75] Prime examples include Google Personalized Search results and Facebook's personalized news-stream.
A filter bubble has been described as exacerbating a phenomenon that called splinternet or cyberbalkanization,[76] which happens when the internet becomes divided into sub-groups of like-minded people who become insulated within their own online community and fail to get exposure to different views. This concern dates back to the early days of the publicly accessible internet, with the term "cyberbalkanization" being coined in 1996.[77][78][79] Other terms have been used to describe this phenomenon, including "ideological frames"[80] and "the figurative sphere surrounding you as you search the internet."[81]

Virtual reality and cyberspace

Virtual reality (VR) is a computer-simulated environment that can simulate physical presence in places in the real world, as well as in imaginary worlds.

 
Reality-virtuality continuum

The virtuality continuum is a continuous scale ranging between the completely virtual, a virtuality, and the completely real: reality. The reality–virtuality continuum therefore encompasses all possible variations and compositions of real and virtual objects. It has been described as a concept in new media and computer science, but in fact it could be considered a matter of anthropology. The concept was first introduced by Paul Milgram.[82]

The area between the two extremes, where both the real and the virtual are mixed, is the so-called mixed reality. This in turn is said to consist of both augmented reality, where the virtual augments the real, and augmented virtuality, where the real augments the virtual. Cyberspace, the world's computer systems considered as an interconnected whole, can be thought of as a virtual reality; for instance, it is portrayed as such in the cyberpunk fiction of William Gibson and others. Second Life and MMORPGs such as World of Warcraft are examples of artificial environments or virtual worlds (falling some way short of full virtual reality) in cyberspace.

"RL" in internet culture

On the Internet, "real life" refers to life in the real world. It generally references life or consensus reality, in contrast to an environment seen as fiction or fantasy, such as virtual reality, lifelike experience, dreams, novels, or movies. Online, the acronym "IRL" stands for "in real life", with the meaning "not on the Internet".[83] Sociologists engaged in the study of the Internet have determined that someday, a distinction between online and real-life worlds may seem "quaint", noting that certain types of online activity, such as sexual intrigues, have already made a full transition to complete legitimacy and "reality".[84] The abbreviation "RL" stands for "real life". For example, one can speak of "meeting in RL" someone whom one has met in a chat or on an Internet forum. It may also be used to express an inability to use the Internet for a time due to "RL problems".

See also

Notes

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  4. ^ Palmer, Gary B. (1996). Toward A Theory of Cultural Linguistics. University of Texas Press. p. 114. ISBN 978-0-292-76569-6.
  5. ^ Some associationist philosophers have contended that mathematics comes from experience and is not a form of any a priori knowledge (Macleod 2016)
  6. ^ Galen Strawson has stated that an a priori argument is one in which "you can see that it is true just lying on your couch. You don't have to get up off your couch and go outside and examine the way things are in the physical world. You don't have to do any science." (Sommers 2003)
  7. ^ dynamis–energeia, translated into Latin as potentia–actualitas (earlier also possibilitas–efficacia). Giorgio Agamben, Opus Dei: An Archaeology of Duty (2013), p. 46.
  8. ^ Sachs (2005)
  9. ^ Sachs (1999, p. lvii).
  10. ^ Durrant (1993, p. 206)
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References

  • Berger, Peter L.; Luckmann, Thomas (1966). The Social Construction of Reality: A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge. New York: Anchor Books. pp. 21–22.
  • Durrant, Michael (1993). Aristotle's De Anima in Focus. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-415-05340-2.
  • Jain, S. A. (1992). Reality. Jwalamalini Trust. Not in Copyright Alt URL
  • Macleod, Christopher (25 August 2016). "John Stuart Mill". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2020 ed.) – via Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University.
  • Sachs, Joe (1999). Aristotle's Metaphysics, a New Translation. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Green Lion Books. ISBN 1-888009-03-9.
  • Sachs, Joe (2005). "Aristotle: Motion and its Place in Nature". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Sommers, Tamler (March 2003). Jarman, Casey (ed.). "Galen Strawson (interview)". Believer Magazine. 1 (1). San Francisco, CA: McSweeney's McMullens. Retrieved 10 July 2013.

Further reading

  • George Musser, "Virtual Reality: How close can physics bring us to a truly fundamental understanding of the world?", Scientific American, vol. 321, no. 3 (September 2019), pp. 30–35.
    • "Physics is ... the bedrock of the broader search for truth.... Yet [physicists] sometimes seem to be struck by a collective impostor syndrome.... Truth can be elusive even in the best-established theories. Quantum mechanics is as well tested a theory as can be, yet its interpretation remains inscrutable. [p. 30.] The deeper physicists dive into reality, the more reality seems to evaporate." [p. 34.]

External links

reality, confused, with, realty, other, uses, disambiguation, aggregate, that, real, existent, within, universe, opposed, that, which, only, imaginary, nonexistent, nonactual, term, also, used, refer, ontological, status, things, indicating, their, existence, . Not to be confused with Realty For other uses see Reality disambiguation Reality is the sum or aggregate of all that is real or existent within the universe as opposed to that which is only imaginary nonexistent or nonactual The term is also used to refer to the ontological status of things indicating their existence 1 In physical terms reality is the totality of a system known and unknown 2 Philosophical questions about the nature of reality or existence or being are considered under the rubric of ontology which is a major branch of metaphysics in the Western philosophical tradition Ontological questions also feature in diverse branches of philosophy including the philosophy of science of religion of mathematics and philosophical logic These include questions about whether only physical objects are real i e physicalism whether reality is fundamentally immaterial e g idealism whether hypothetical unobservable entities posited by scientific theories exist whether a God exists whether numbers and other abstract objects exist and whether possible worlds exist Epistemology is concerned with what can be known or inferred as likely and how whereby in the modern world emphasis is put on reason empirical evidence and science as sources and methods to determine or investigate reality Contents 1 World views 1 1 World views and theories 2 Related concepts 2 1 A priori and a posteriori 2 2 Potentiality and actuality 2 3 Belief 2 3 1 Belief studies 3 Western philosophy 3 1 Realism 3 2 Anti realism 3 3 Being 3 3 1 Explanations for the existence of something rather than nothing 3 4 Perception 3 5 Abstract objects and mathematics 3 6 Properties 3 7 Time and space 3 8 Possible worlds 3 9 Theories of everything TOE and philosophy 3 10 Phenomenology 3 11 Skeptical hypotheses 4 Non western ancient philosophy and religion 4 1 Jain philosophy 5 Physical sciences 5 1 Scientific realism 5 2 Realism and locality in physics 5 2 1 Role of observation in quantum mechanics 5 3 Multiverse 5 4 Anthropic principle 5 5 Personal and collective reality 5 6 Scientific theories of everything 6 Technology 6 1 Media 6 1 1 Filter bubbles and echo chambers 6 2 Virtual reality and cyberspace 6 3 RL in internet culture 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksWorld viewsWorld views and theories Further information World view A common colloquial usage would have reality mean perceptions beliefs and attitudes toward reality as in My reality is not your reality This is often used just as a colloquialism indicating that the parties to a conversation agree or should agree not to quibble over deeply different conceptions of what is real For example in a religious discussion between friends one might say attempting humor You might disagree but in my reality everyone goes to heaven Reality can be defined in a way that links it to worldviews or parts of them conceptual frameworks Reality is the totality of all things structures actual and conceptual events past and present and phenomena whether observable or not It is what a world view whether it be based on individual or shared human experience ultimately attempts to describe or map A worldview or a world view or Weltanschauung is the fundamental cognitive orientation of an individual or society encompassing the whole of the individual s or society s knowledge culture and point of view 3 A worldview can include natural philosophy fundamental existential and normative postulates or themes values emotions and ethics 4 Certain ideas from physics philosophy sociology literary criticism and other fields shape various theories of reality One such theory is that there simply and literally is no reality beyond the perceptions or beliefs we each have about reality citation needed Such attitudes are summarized in popular statements such as Perception is reality or Life is how you perceive reality or reality is what you can get away with Robert Anton Wilson and they indicate anti realism that is the view that there is no objective reality whether acknowledged explicitly or not Many of the concepts of science and philosophy are often defined culturally and socially This idea was elaborated by Thomas Kuhn in his book The Structure of Scientific Revolutions 1962 The Social Construction of Reality a book about the sociology of knowledge written by Peter L Berger and Thomas Luckmann was published in 1966 It explained how knowledge is acquired and used for the comprehension of reality Out of all the realities the reality of everyday life is the most important one since our consciousness requires us to be completely aware and attentive to the experience of everyday life Related conceptsSee also Truth and Fact A priori and a posteriori This section is an excerpt from A priori and a posteriori edit A priori from the earlier and a posteriori from the later are Latin phrases used in philosophy to distinguish types of knowledge justification or argument by their reliance on experience A priori knowledge is independent from any experience Examples include mathematics 5 tautologies and deduction from pure reason 6 A posteriori knowledge depends on empirical evidence Examples include most fields of science and aspects of personal knowledge Potentiality and actuality This section is an excerpt from Potentiality and actuality edit In philosophy potentiality and actuality 7 are a pair of closely connected principles which Aristotle used to analyze motion causality ethics and physiology in his Physics Metaphysics Nicomachean Ethics and De Anima 8 The concept of potentiality in this context generally refers to any possibility that a thing can be said to have Aristotle did not consider all possibilities the same and emphasized the importance of those that become real of their own accord when conditions are right and nothing stops them 9 Actuality in contrast to potentiality is the motion change or activity that represents an exercise or fulfillment of a possibility when a possibility becomes real in the fullest sense 10 Belief This section is an excerpt from Belief edit A belief is a subjective attitude that a proposition is true or a state of affairs is the case A subjective attitude is a mental state of having some stance take or opinion about something 11 In epistemology philosophers use the term belief to refer to attitudes about the world which can be either true or false 12 To believe something is to take it to be true for instance to believe that snow is white is comparable to accepting the truth of the proposition snow is white However holding a belief does not require active introspection For example few individuals carefully consider whether or not the sun will rise tomorrow simply assuming that it will Moreover beliefs need not be occurrent e g a person actively thinking snow is white but can instead be dispositional e g a person who if asked about the color of snow would assert snow is white 12 There are various ways that contemporary philosophers have tried to describe beliefs including as representations of ways that the world could be Jerry Fodor as dispositions to act as if certain things are true Roderick Chisholm as interpretive schemes for making sense of someone s actions Daniel Dennett and Donald Davidson or as mental states that fill a particular function Hilary Putnam 12 Some have also attempted to offer significant revisions to our notion of belief including eliminativists about belief who argue that there is no phenomenon in the natural world which corresponds to our folk psychological concept of belief Paul Churchland and formal epistemologists who aim to replace our bivalent notion of belief either we have a belief or we don t have a belief with the more permissive probabilistic notion of credence there is an entire spectrum of degrees of belief not a simple dichotomy between belief and non belief 12 13 Beliefs are the subject of various important philosophical debates Notable examples include What is the rational way to revise one s beliefs when presented with various sorts of evidence Is the content of our beliefs entirely determined by our mental states or do the relevant facts have any bearing on our beliefs e g if I believe that I m holding a glass of water is the non mental fact that water is H2O part of the content of that belief How fine grained or coarse grained are our beliefs and Must it be possible for a belief to be expressible in language or are there non linguistic beliefs 12 Belief studies This section is an excerpt from Belief Belief studies edit nbsp Socio demographic correlates of witchcraft beliefs 14 There is research investigating specific beliefs types of beliefs and patterns of beliefs For example a study estimated contemporary prevalence and associations with belief in witchcraft around the world which in its data varied between 9 and 90 between nations and is still a widespread element in worldviews globally It also shows associations such as with lower innovative activity higher levels of anxiety lower life expectancy and higher religiosity 15 14 Other research is investigating beliefs in misinformation and their resistance to correction including with respect to misinformation countermeasures It describes cognitive social and affective processes that leave people vulnerable to the formation of false beliefs 16 A study introduced the concept of false social reality which refers to widespread perceptions of public opinion that are shown to be false such as underestimated general public support in the U S for climate change mitigation policies 17 18 Studies also suggested some uses of psychedelics can shift beliefs in some humans in certain ways such as increasing attribution of consciousness to various entities including plants and inanimate objects and towards panpsychism and fatalism 19 20 Western philosophyPhilosophy addresses two different aspects of the topic of reality the nature of reality itself and the relationship between the mind as well as language and culture and reality On the one hand ontology is the study of being and the central topic of the field is couched variously in terms of being existence what is and reality The task in ontology is to describe the most general categories of reality and how they are interrelated If a philosopher wanted to proffer a positive definition of the concept reality it would be done under this heading As explained above some philosophers draw a distinction between reality and existence In fact many analytic philosophers today tend to avoid the term real and reality in discussing ontological issues But for those who would treat is real the same way they treat exists one of the leading questions of analytic philosophy has been whether existence or reality is a property of objects It has been widely held by analytic philosophers that it is not a property at all though this view has lost some ground in recent decades On the other hand particularly in discussions of objectivity that have feet in both metaphysics and epistemology philosophical discussions of reality often concern the ways in which reality is or is not in some way dependent upon or to use fashionable jargon constructed out of mental and cultural factors such as perceptions beliefs and other mental states as well as cultural artifacts such as religions and political movements on up to the vague notion of a common cultural world view or Weltanschauung Realism The view that there is a reality independent of any beliefs perceptions etc is called realism More specifically philosophers are given to speaking about realism about this and that such as realism about universals or realism about the external world Generally where one can identify any class of object the existence or essential characteristics of which is said not to depend on perceptions beliefs language or any other human artifact one can speak of realism about that object A correspondence theory of knowledge about what exists claims that true knowledge of reality represents accurate correspondence of statements about and images of reality with the actual reality that the statements or images are attempting to represent For example the scientific method can verify that a statement is true based on the observable evidence that a thing exists Many humans can point to the Rocky Mountains and say that this mountain range exists and continues to exist even if no one is observing it or making statements about it Anti realism One can also speak of anti realism about the same objects Anti realism is the latest in a long series of terms for views opposed to realism Perhaps the first was idealism so called because reality was said to be in the mind or a product of our ideas Berkeleyan idealism is the view propounded by the Irish empiricist George Berkeley that the objects of perception are actually ideas in the mind In this view one might be tempted to say that reality is a mental construct this is not quite accurate however since in Berkeley s view perceptual ideas are created and coordinated by God By the 20th century views similar to Berkeley s were called phenomenalism Phenomenalism differs from Berkeleyan idealism primarily in that Berkeley believed that minds or souls are not merely ideas nor made up of ideas whereas varieties of phenomenalism such as that advocated by Russell tended to go farther to say that the mind itself is merely a collection of perceptions memories etc and that there is no mind or soul over and above such mental events Finally anti realism became a fashionable term for any view which held that the existence of some object depends upon the mind or cultural artifacts The view that the so called external world is really merely a social or cultural artifact called social constructionism is one variety of anti realism Cultural relativism is the view that social issues such as morality are not absolute but at least partially cultural artifact Being The nature of being is a perennial topic in metaphysics For instance Parmenides taught that reality was a single unchanging Being whereas Heraclitus wrote that all things flow The 20th century philosopher Heidegger thought previous philosophers have lost sight of the question of Being qua Being in favour of the questions of beings existing things so he believed that a return to the Parmenidean approach was needed An ontological catalogue is an attempt to list the fundamental constituents of reality The question of whether or not existence is a predicate has been discussed since the Early Modern period not least in relation to the ontological argument for the existence of God Existence that something is has been contrasted with essence the question of what something is Since existence without essence seems blank it associated with nothingness by philosophers such as Hegel Nihilism represents an extremely negative view of being the absolute a positive one Explanations for the existence of something rather than nothing This section is an excerpt from Why there is anything at all edit Why is there anything at all or why is there something rather than nothing is a question about the reason for basic existence which has been raised or commented on by a range of philosophers and physicists including Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz 21 Ludwig Wittgenstein 22 and Martin Heidegger 23 who called it the fundamental question of metaphysics 24 25 26 Perception The question of direct or naive realism as opposed to indirect or representational realism arises in the philosophy of perception and of mind out of the debate over the nature of conscious experience 27 28 the epistemological question of whether the world we see around us is the real world itself or merely an internal perceptual copy of that world generated by neural processes in our brain Naive realism is known as direct realism when developed to counter indirect or representative realism also known as epistemological dualism 29 the philosophical position that our conscious experience is not of the real world itself but of an internal representation a miniature virtual reality replica of the world Timothy Leary coined the influential term Reality Tunnel by which he means a kind of representative realism The theory states that with a subconscious set of mental filters formed from their beliefs and experiences every individual interprets the same world differently hence Truth is in the eye of the beholder His ideas influenced the work of his friend Robert Anton Wilson Abstract objects and mathematics The status of abstract entities particularly numbers is a topic of discussion in mathematics In the philosophy of mathematics the best known form of realism about numbers is Platonic realism which grants them abstract immaterial existence Other forms of realism identify mathematics with the concrete physical universe Anti realist stances include formalism and fictionalism Some approaches are selectively realistic about some mathematical objects but not others Finitism rejects infinite quantities Ultra finitism accepts finite quantities up to a certain amount Constructivism and intuitionism are realistic about objects that can be explicitly constructed but reject the use of the principle of the excluded middle to prove existence by reductio ad absurdum The traditional debate has focused on whether an abstract immaterial intelligible realm of numbers has existed in addition to the physical sensible concrete world A recent development is the mathematical universe hypothesis the theory that only a mathematical world exists with the finite physical world being an illusion within it An extreme form of realism about mathematics is the mathematical multiverse hypothesis advanced by Max Tegmark Tegmark s sole postulate is All structures that exist mathematically also exist physically That is in the sense that in those worlds complex enough to contain self aware substructures they will subjectively perceive themselves as existing in a physically real world 30 31 The hypothesis suggests that worlds corresponding to different sets of initial conditions physical constants or altogether different equations should be considered real The theory can be considered a form of Platonism in that it posits the existence of mathematical entities but can also be considered a mathematical monism in that it denies that anything exists except mathematical objects Properties Main article Problem of universals The problem of universals is an ancient problem in metaphysics about whether universals exist Universals are general or abstract qualities characteristics properties kinds or relations such as being male female solid liquid gas or a certain colour 32 that can be predicated of individuals or particulars or that individuals or particulars can be regarded as sharing or participating in For example Scott Pat and Chris have in common the universal quality of being human or humanity The realist school claims that universals are real they exist and are distinct from the particulars that instantiate them There are various forms of realism Two major forms are Platonic realism and Aristotelian realism 33 Platonic realism is the view that universals are real entities and they exist independent of particulars Aristotelian realism on the other hand is the view that universals are real entities but their existence is dependent on the particulars that exemplify them Nominalism and conceptualism are the main forms of anti realism about universals Time and space Main article Philosophy of space and time A traditional realist position in ontology is that time and space have existence apart from the human mind Idealists deny or doubt the existence of objects independent of the mind Some anti realists whose ontological position is that objects outside the mind do exist nevertheless doubt the independent existence of time and space Kant in the Critique of Pure Reason described time as an a priori notion that together with other a priori notions such as space allows us to comprehend sense experience Kant denies that either space or time are substance entities in themselves or learned by experience he holds rather that both are elements of a systematic framework we use to structure our experience Spatial measurements are used to quantify how far apart objects are and temporal measurements are used to quantitatively compare the interval between or duration of events Although space and time are held to be transcendentally ideal in this sense they are also empirically real i e not mere illusions Idealist writers such as J M E McTaggart in The Unreality of Time have argued that time is an illusion As well as differing about the reality of time as a whole metaphysical theories of time can differ in their ascriptions of reality to the past present and future separately Presentism holds that the past and future are unreal and only an ever changing present is real The block universe theory also known as Eternalism holds that past present and future are all real but the passage of time is an illusion It is often said to have a scientific basis in relativity The growing block universe theory holds that past and present are real but the future is not Time and the related concepts of process and evolution are central to the system building metaphysics of A N Whitehead and Charles Hartshorne Possible worlds The term possible world goes back to Leibniz s theory of possible worlds used to analyse necessity possibility and similar modal notions Modal realism is the view notably propounded by David Kellogg Lewis that all possible worlds are as real as the actual world In short the actual world is regarded as merely one among an infinite set of logically possible worlds some nearer to the actual world and some more remote Other theorists may use the Possible World framework to express and explore problems without committing to it ontologically Possible world theory is related to alethic logic a proposition is necessary if it is true in all possible worlds and possible if it is true in at least one The many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics is a similar idea in science Theories of everything TOE and philosophy Main article Theory of everything philosophy The philosophical implications of a physical TOE are frequently debated For example if philosophical physicalism is true a physical TOE will coincide with a philosophical theory of everything The system building style of metaphysics attempts to answer all the important questions in a coherent way providing a complete picture of the world Plato and Aristotle could be said to be early examples of comprehensive systems In the early modern period 17th and 18th centuries the system building scope of philosophy is often linked to the rationalist method of philosophy that is the technique of deducing the nature of the world by pure a priori reason Examples from the early modern period include the Leibniz s Monadology Descartes s Dualism Spinoza s Monism Hegel s Absolute idealism and Whitehead s Process philosophy were later systems Other philosophers do not believe its techniques can aim so high Some scientists think a more mathematical approach than philosophy is needed for a TOE for instance Stephen Hawking wrote in A Brief History of Time that even if we had a TOE it would necessarily be a set of equations He wrote What is it that breathes fire into the equations and makes a universe for them to describe 34 Phenomenology On a much broader and more subjective level specify private experiences curiosity inquiry and the selectivity involved in personal interpretation of events shapes reality as seen by one and only one person 35 and hence is called phenomenological While this form of reality might be common to others as well it could at times also be so unique to oneself as to never be experienced or agreed upon by anyone else Much of the kind of experience deemed spiritual occurs on this level of reality Phenomenology is a philosophical method developed in the early years of the twentieth century by Edmund Husserl and a circle of followers at the universities of Gottingen and Munich in Germany Subsequently phenomenological themes were taken up by philosophers in France the United States and elsewhere often in contexts far removed from Husserl s work The word phenomenology comes from the Greek phainomenon meaning that which appears and logos meaning study In Husserl s conception phenomenology is primarily concerned with making the structures of consciousness and the phenomena which appear in acts of consciousness objects of systematic reflection and analysis Such reflection was to take place from a highly modified first person viewpoint studying phenomena not as they appear to my consciousness but to any consciousness whatsoever Husserl believed that phenomenology could thus provide a firm basis for all human knowledge including scientific knowledge and could establish philosophy as a rigorous science 36 Husserl s conception of phenomenology has also been criticised and developed by his student and assistant Martin Heidegger by existentialists like Maurice Merleau Ponty and Jean Paul Sartre and by other philosophers such as Paul Ricoeur Emmanuel Levinas and Dietrich von Hildebrand 37 Skeptical hypotheses nbsp A brain in a vat that believes it is walking Skeptical hypotheses in philosophy suggest that reality could be very different from what we think it is or at least that we cannot prove it is not Examples include The Brain in a vat hypothesis is cast in scientific terms It supposes that one might be a disembodied brain kept alive in a vat and fed false sensory signals This hypothesis is related to the Matrix hypothesis below The Dream argument of Descartes and Zhuangzi supposes reality to be indistinguishable from a dream Descartes Evil demon is a being as clever and deceitful as he is powerful who has directed his entire effort to misleading me The five minute hypothesis or omphalos hypothesis or Last Thursdayism suggests that the world was created recently together with records and traces indicating a greater age Diminished reality refers to artificially diminished reality not due to limitations of sensory systems but via artificial filters 38 The Matrix hypothesis or Simulated reality hypothesis suggest that we might be inside a computer simulation or virtual reality Related hypotheses may also involve simulations with signals that allow the inhabitant species in virtual or simulated reality to perceive the external reality Non western ancient philosophy and religionJain philosophy Main article Tattva Jainism Jain philosophy postulates that seven tattva truths or fundamental principles constitute reality 39 These seven tattva are 40 Jiva The soul which is characterized by consciousness Ajiva The non soul Asrava Influx of karma Bandha The bondage of karma Samvara Obstruction of the inflow of karmic matter into the soul Nirjara Shedding of karmas Moksha Liberation or Salvation i e the complete annihilation of all karmic matter bound with any particular soul Physical sciencesScientific realism Scientific realism is at the most general level the view that the world the universe described by science perhaps ideal science is the real world as it is independent of what we might take it to be Within philosophy of science it is often framed as an answer to the question how is the success of science to be explained The debate over what the success of science involves centers primarily on the status of entities that are not directly observable discussed by scientific theories Generally those who are scientific realists state that one can make reliable claims about these entities viz that they have the same ontological status as directly observable entities as opposed to instrumentalism The most used and studied scientific theories today state more or less the truth Realism and locality in physics Realism in the sense used by physicists does not equate to realism in metaphysics 41 The latter is the claim that the world is mind independent that even if the results of a measurement do not pre exist the act of measurement that does not require that they are the creation of the observer Furthermore a mind independent property does not have to be the value of some physical variable such as position or momentum A property can be dispositional or potential i e it can be a tendency in the way that glass objects tend to break or are disposed to break even if they do not actually break Likewise the mind independent properties of quantum systems could consist of a tendency to respond to particular measurements with particular values with ascertainable probability 42 Such an ontology would be metaphysically realistic without being realistic in the physicist s sense of local realism which would require that a single value be produced with certainty A closely related term is counterfactual definiteness CFD used to refer to the claim that one can meaningfully speak of the definiteness of results of measurements that have not been performed i e the ability to assume the existence of objects and properties of objects even when they have not been measured Local realism is a significant feature of classical mechanics of general relativity and of electrodynamics but quantum mechanics has shown that quantum entanglement is possible This was rejected by Einstein who proposed the EPR paradox but it was subsequently quantified by Bell s inequalities 43 If Bell s inequalities are violated either local realism or counterfactual definiteness must be incorrect but some physicists dispute that experiments have demonstrated Bell s violations on the grounds that the sub class of inhomogeneous Bell inequalities has not been tested or due to experimental limitations in the tests Different interpretations of quantum mechanics violate different parts of local realism and or counterfactual definiteness The transition from possible to actual is a major topic of quantum physics with related theories including quantum darwinism Role of observation in quantum mechanics See also Quantum decoherence The quantum mind body problem refers to the philosophical discussions of the mind body problem in the context of quantum mechanics Since quantum mechanics involves quantum superpositions which are not perceived by observers some interpretations of quantum mechanics place conscious observers in a special position The founders of quantum mechanics debated the role of the observer and of them Wolfgang Pauli and Werner Heisenberg believed that it was the observer that produced collapse This point of view which was never fully endorsed by Niels Bohr was denounced as mystical and anti scientific by Albert Einstein Pauli accepted the term and described quantum mechanics as lucid mysticism 44 Heisenberg and Bohr always described quantum mechanics in logical positivist terms Bohr also took an active interest in the philosophical implications of quantum theories such as his complementarity for example 45 He believed quantum theory offers a complete description of nature albeit one that is simply ill suited for everyday experiences which are better described by classical mechanics and probability Bohr never specified a demarcation line above which objects cease to be quantum and become classical He believed that it was not a question of physics but one of philosophy Eugene Wigner reformulated the Schrodinger s cat thought experiment as Wigner s friend and proposed that the consciousness of an observer is the demarcation line which precipitates collapse of the wave function independent of any realist interpretation Commonly known as consciousness causes collapse this controversial interpretation of quantum mechanics states that observation by a conscious observer is what makes the wave function collapse However this is a minority view among quantum philosophers considering it a misunderstanding 46 There are other possible solutions to the Wigner s friend thought experiment which do not require consciousness to be different from other physical processes Moreover Wigner shifted to those interpretations in his later years 47 Multiverse The multiverse is the hypothetical set of multiple possible universes including the historical universe we consistently experience that together comprise everything that exists the entirety of space time matter and energy as well as the physical laws and constants that describe them The term was coined in 1895 by the American philosopher and psychologist William James 48 In the many worlds interpretation MWI one of the mainstream interpretations of quantum mechanics there are an infinite number of universes and every possible quantum outcome occurs in at least one universe albeit there is a debate as to how real the other worlds are The structure of the multiverse the nature of each universe within it and the relationship between the various constituent universes depend on the specific multiverse hypothesis considered Multiverses have been hypothesized in cosmology physics astronomy religion philosophy transpersonal psychology and fiction particularly in science fiction and fantasy In these contexts parallel universes are also called alternative universes quantum universes interpenetrating dimensions parallel dimensions parallel worlds alternative realities alternative timelines and dimensional planes among others In several theories there is a series of in some cases infinite self sustaining cycles typically a series of Big Crunches or Big Bounces However the respective universes do not exist at once but are forming or following in a logical order or sequence with key natural constituents potentially varying between universes see Anthropic principle Anthropic principle This paragraph is an excerpt from Anthropic principle edit The anthropic principle also known as the observation selection effect 49 is the hypothesis first proposed in 1957 by Robert Dicke that the range of possible observations that could be made about the universe is limited by the fact that observations could happen only in a universe capable of developing intelligent life 50 Proponents of the anthropic principle argue that it explains why the universe has the age and the fundamental physical constants necessary to accommodate conscious life since if either had been different no one would have been around to make observations Anthropic reasoning is often used to deal with the idea that the universe seems to be finely tuned for the existence of life 51 Personal and collective reality nbsp White matter tracts within a human brain as visualized by MRI tractography Each individual has a different view of reality with different memories and personal history knowledge personality traits and experience 52 This system mostly referring to the human brain affects cognition and behavior and into this complex new knowledge memories 53 information thoughts and experiences are continuously integrated 54 additional citation s needed The connectome neural networks wirings in brains is thought to be a key factor in human variability in terms of cognition or the way we perceive the world as a context and related features or processes 55 56 57 Sensemaking is the process by which people give meaning to their experiences and make sense of the world they live in Personal identity is relating to questions like how a unique individual is persisting through time Sensemaking and determination of reality also occurs collectively which is investigated in social epistemology and related approaches From the collective intelligence perspective the intelligence of the individual human and potentially AI entities is substantially limited and advanced intelligence emerges when multiple entities collaborate over time 58 additional citation s needed Collective memory is an important component of the social construction of reality 59 and communication and communication related systems such as media systems may also be major components see Technology Philosophy of perception raises questions based on the evolutionary history of humans perceptual apparatuses particularly or especially individuals physiological senses described as w e don t see reality we only see what was useful to see in the past partly suggesting that o ur species has been so successful not in spite of our inability to see reality but because of it 60 Scientific theories of everything A theory of everything TOE is a putative theory of theoretical physics that fully explains and links together all known physical phenomena and predicts the outcome of any experiment that could be carried out in principle The theory of everything is also called the final theory 61 Many candidate theories of everything have been proposed by theoretical physicists during the twentieth century but none have been confirmed experimentally The primary problem in producing a TOE is that general relativity and quantum mechanics are hard to unify This is one of the unsolved problems in physics Initially the term theory of everything was used with an ironic connotation to refer to various overgeneralized theories For example a great grandfather of Ijon Tichy a character from a cycle of Stanislaw Lem s science fiction stories of the 1960s was known to work on the General Theory of Everything Physicist John Ellis 62 claims to have introduced the term into the technical literature in an article in Nature in 1986 63 Over time the term stuck in popularizations of quantum physics to describe a theory that would unify or explain through a single model the theories of all fundamental interactions and of all particles of nature general relativity for gravitation and the standard model of elementary particle physics which includes quantum mechanics for electromagnetism the two nuclear interactions and the known elementary particles Current candidates for a theory of everything include string theory M theory and loop quantum gravity TechnologyMedia See also Personal and collective reality and Belief studies Media such as news media social media websites including Wikipedia 64 and fiction 65 shape individuals and society s perception of reality including as part of belief and attitude formation 65 and are partly used intentionally as means to learn about reality Various technologies have changed society s relationship with reality such as the advent of radio and TV technologies Research investigates interrelations and effects for example aspects in the social construction of reality 66 A major component of this shaping and representation of perceived reality is agenda selection and prioritization not only or primarily the quality tone and types of content which influences for instance the public agenda 67 68 Disproportional news attention for low probability incidents such as high consequence accidents can distort audiences risk perceptions with harmful consequences 69 Various biases such as false balance public attention dependence reactions like sensationalism and domination by current events 70 as well as various interest driven uses of media such as marketing can also have major impacts on the perception of reality Time use studies found that e g in 2018 the average U S American spent around eleven hours every day looking at screens 71 Filter bubbles and echo chambers This paragraph is an excerpt from Filter bubble edit A filter bubble or ideological frame is a state of intellectual isolation 72 that can result from personalized searches recommendation systems and algorithmic curation The search results are based on information about the user such as their location past click behavior and search history 73 Consequently users become separated from information that disagrees with their viewpoints effectively isolating them in their own cultural or ideological bubbles resulting in a limited and customized view of the world 74 The choices made by these algorithms are only sometimes transparent 75 Prime examples include Google Personalized Search results and Facebook s personalized news stream A filter bubble has been described as exacerbating a phenomenon that called splinternet or cyberbalkanization 76 which happens when the internet becomes divided into sub groups of like minded people who become insulated within their own online community and fail to get exposure to different views This concern dates back to the early days of the publicly accessible internet with the term cyberbalkanization being coined in 1996 77 78 79 Other terms have been used to describe this phenomenon including ideological frames 80 and the figurative sphere surrounding you as you search the internet 81 Virtual reality and cyberspace Virtual reality VR is a computer simulated environment that can simulate physical presence in places in the real world as well as in imaginary worlds nbsp Reality virtuality continuumThe virtuality continuum is a continuous scale ranging between the completely virtual a virtuality and the completely real reality The reality virtuality continuum therefore encompasses all possible variations and compositions of real and virtual objects It has been described as a concept in new media and computer science but in fact it could be considered a matter of anthropology The concept was first introduced by Paul Milgram 82 The area between the two extremes where both the real and the virtual are mixed is the so called mixed reality This in turn is said to consist of both augmented reality where the virtual augments the real and augmented virtuality where the real augments the virtual Cyberspace the world s computer systems considered as an interconnected whole can be thought of as a virtual reality for instance it is portrayed as such in the cyberpunk fiction of William Gibson and others Second Life and MMORPGs such as World of Warcraft are examples of artificial environments or virtual worlds falling some way short of full virtual reality in cyberspace RL in internet culture On the Internet real life refers to life in the real world It generally references life or consensus reality in contrast to an environment seen as fiction or fantasy such as virtual reality lifelike experience dreams novels or movies Online the acronym IRL stands for in real life with the meaning not on the Internet 83 Sociologists engaged in the study of the Internet have determined that someday a distinction between online and real life worlds may seem quaint noting that certain types of online activity such as sexual intrigues have already made a full transition to complete legitimacy and reality 84 The abbreviation RL stands for real life For example one can speak of meeting in RL someone whom one has met in a chat or on an Internet forum It may also be used to express an inability to use the Internet for a time due to RL problems See alsoAlternate history Counterfactual history Derealization Consciousness Extended modal realism Modal 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make use of algorithms to selectively assume the information a user would want to see and then give information to the user according to this assumption A filter bubble therefore can cause users to get significantly less contact with contradicting viewpoints causing the user to become intellectually isolated Bozdag Engin September 2013 Bias in algorithmic filtering and personalization Ethics and Information Technology 15 3 209 227 doi 10 1007 s10676 013 9321 6 S2CID 14970635 Huffington Post The Huffington Post Are Filter bubbles Shrinking Our Minds Archived 2016 11 03 at the Wayback Machine Encrypt Search 2019 02 26 What Are Filter Bubbles amp How To Avoid Them Search Encrypt Blog Archived from the original on 2019 02 25 Retrieved 2019 03 19 The term cyber balkanization sometimes with a hyphen is a hybrid of cyber relating to the internet and Balkanization referring to that region of Europe that was historically subdivided by languages religions and cultures the term was coined in a paper by MIT researchers Van Alstyne and Brynjolfsson Van Alstyne Marshall Brynjolfsson Erik March 1997 Copyright 1996 Electronic Communities Global Village or Cyberbalkans PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2016 04 05 Retrieved 2017 09 24 Van Alstyne Marshall Brynjolfsson Erik November 1996 Could the Internet Balkanize Science Science 274 5292 1479 1480 Bibcode 1996Sci 274 1479V doi 10 1126 science 274 5292 1479 S2CID 62546078 Alex Pham Jon Healey September 24 2005 Systems hope to tell you what you d like Preference engines guide users through the flood of content Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on December 8 2015 Retrieved December 4 2015 if recommenders were perfect I can have the option of talking to only people who are just like me Cyber balkanization as Brynjolfsson coined the scenario is not an inevitable effect of recommendation tools Weisberg Jacob June 10 2011 Bubble Trouble Is Web personalization turning us into solipsistic twits Slate Archived from the original on June 12 2011 Retrieved August 15 2011 Lazar Shira June 1 2011 Algorithms and the Filter Bubble Ruining Your Online Experience Huffington Post Archived from the original on April 13 2016 Retrieved August 15 2011 a filter bubble is the figurative sphere surrounding you as you search the Internet Milgram Paul H Takemura A Utsumi F Kishino 1994 Augmented Reality A class of displays on the reality virtuality continuum PDF Proceedings of Telemanipulator and Telepresence Technologies pp 2351 34 Archived from the original PDF on 2006 10 04 Retrieved 2007 03 15 IRL Definition by AcronymFinder www acronymfinder com Don Slater 2002 Social Relationships and Identity On line and Off line In Livingstone Sonia Lievrouw Leah eds Handbook of New Media Social Shaping and Consequences of ICTs Sage Publications Inc pp 533 543 ISBN 0 7619 6510 6 ReferencesBerger Peter L Luckmann Thomas 1966 The Social Construction of Reality A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge New York Anchor Books pp 21 22 Durrant Michael 1993 Aristotle s De Anima in Focus Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 05340 2 Jain S A 1992 Reality Jwalamalini Trust Not in Copyright Alt URL Macleod Christopher 25 August 2016 John Stuart Mill In Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summer 2020 ed via Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Sachs Joe 1999 Aristotle s Metaphysics a New Translation Santa Fe New Mexico Green Lion Books ISBN 1 888009 03 9 Sachs Joe 2005 Aristotle Motion and its Place in Nature Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Sommers Tamler March 2003 Jarman Casey ed Galen Strawson interview Believer Magazine 1 1 San Francisco CA McSweeney s McMullens Retrieved 10 July 2013 Further readingGeorge Musser Virtual Reality How close can physics bring us to a truly fundamental understanding of the world Scientific American vol 321 no 3 September 2019 pp 30 35 Physics is the bedrock of the broader search for truth Yet physicists sometimes seem to be struck by a collective impostor syndrome Truth can be elusive even in the best established theories Quantum mechanics is as well tested a theory as can be yet its interpretation remains inscrutable p 30 The deeper physicists dive into reality the more reality seems to evaporate p 34 External linksReality at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity Miller Alexander Realism In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy C D Broad on Reality Phenomenology Online Materials discussing and exemplifying phenomenological research The Matrix as Metaphysics by David Chalmers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reality amp oldid 1217205512, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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