yougene
Bluelighter
- Joined
- May 19, 2003
- Messages
- 3,336
Then what is it based on then.thursday said:mathematical axioms are not based on physical observations or personal experiences, and what do spiritual experiences have to do with any of this?
Everyone has the potential to view and explore "objective" reality. It's a point of view that anyone can take on and be on the same page. With that said how is that different from many other subjective experiences though? People can also be on the same page in perspectives that wouldn't traditionally be considered objective.
Subjective:
1. Proceeding from or taking place in a person's mind rather than the external world: a subjective decision.
2. Particular to a given person; personal: subjective experience.
3. Existing only in the mind; illusory.
Objective:
1. Having actual existence or reality.
2. Uninfluenced by emotions or personal prejudices: an objective critic.
3. Based on observable phenomena; presented factually: an objective appraisal.
by definition objective reality is that part of reality which we all percieve the same independent of our personal dispositions, it's what we can all agree on. subjective experiences or "perspectives" cannot be objective because they are particular to a given person, they vary between individuals.
A subjective experience doesn't have to be limited to one person.
I am not talking about logic I am talking about over confidence in beliefs and its effects.how does logic confine someone? how is exercising reason being overconfident in your beliefs? if anything, it prevents you from assuming subjective beliefs as true when they are unsupported by empirical evidence or logic.
Right but this can be a bit tricky if you are so set in your beliefs to where you subconsciously interpret information and memories selectively.reason demands that you deliberately scrutinize and question anything before you accept it as true. reason also demands that you reconsider beliefs you formerly held as true if you are presented with a logical and valid counter argument.
By exploring multiple perspectives. Assuming different sets of axioms, seeing how different sets of axioms correlate with each other, etc... There is much to learn about "objective" reality through exploring subjectivity and vice versa.how else would you derive truth? through revelations given to you by god? through mythos as people did before empirical science was invented? through arbitrary assumptions? by believing that which is irrational to believe in?