And when I was saying reality is neither an illusion nor a non-illusion I wasn't just talking about particles and waves. Nothing "is" as it seems, yet everything should be taken at face value to a certain extent. There's the difference between conventional or crude truths, and ultimate truths, that is talked about in Tibetan Buddhism. Where conventional truth is what we see around us and live in most of the time, but the ultimate truth is nothing is really permanent or even the same from the next moment to the next, and has no fixed reality in and of itself, yet that everything is one, and, in a way, permanent, everlasting, yet still ever-changing.
What are some good existentialist readings you enjoy? I'd like to go through some of them.
Who is the juiciest philosopher of existentialism, to you? Meaning, who says the most with the least amount of words?
I'm not in a retirement home, so I can't sit around reading all day, though I do love to gain new ideas.