Reality
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"The [[mind]] of man can [[imagination|imagine]] nothing which has not really [[Existence|existed]] [[The mind of man can imagine nothing which has not really existed|[...]]]." --[[Edgar Allan Poe]] | "The [[mind]] of man can [[imagination|imagine]] nothing which has not really [[Existence|existed]] [[The mind of man can imagine nothing which has not really existed|[...]]]." --[[Edgar Allan Poe]] | ||
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- | "[[Cogito ergo sum |I think, therefore I am]]" --[[René Descartes]] | ||
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"[[What is truth?]] A mobile army of [[metaphor]]s, [[Metonymy|metonyms]], and [[anthropomorphism]]s. --[[Friedrich Nietzsche]] in "[[On Truth and Lies in a Nonmoral Sense]]" | "[[What is truth?]] A mobile army of [[metaphor]]s, [[Metonymy|metonyms]], and [[anthropomorphism]]s. --[[Friedrich Nietzsche]] in "[[On Truth and Lies in a Nonmoral Sense]]" |
Revision as of 07:43, 11 July 2014
"Imaginary gardens with real toads in them [...]." --Marianne Moore "The mind of man can imagine nothing which has not really existed [...]." --Edgar Allan Poe "What is truth? A mobile army of metaphors, metonyms, and anthropomorphisms. --Friedrich Nietzsche in "On Truth and Lies in a Nonmoral Sense" |
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Reality is the state of things as they actually exist, rather than as they may appear or might be imagined. In a wider definition, reality includes everything that is and has been, whether or not it is observable or comprehensible. A still more broad definition includes everything that has existed, exists, or will exist.
Philosophers, mathematicians, and other ancient and modern thinkers, such as Aristotle, Plato, Frege, Wittgenstein, and Russell, have made a distinction between thought corresponding to reality, coherent abstractions (thoughts of things that are imaginable but not real), and that which cannot even be rationally thought. By contrast existence is often restricted solely to that which has physical existence or has a direct basis in it in the way that thoughts do in the brain.
Reality is often contrasted with what is imaginary, delusional, (only) in the mind, dreams, what is false, what is fictional, or what is abstract. At the same time, what is abstract plays a role both in everyday life and in academic research. For instance, causality, virtue, life and distributive justice are abstract concepts that can be difficult to define, but they are only rarely equalled with pure delusions. Both the existence and reality of abstractions is in dispute: one extreme position regard them as mere words, another position regard them as higher truths than less abstract concepts. This disagreement is the basis of the philosophical Problem of universals.
The truth refers to what is real, while falsity refers to what is not. Fictions are considered not real.
Etymology
From the Classical rēs (“thing”) + -ālis (suffix forming adjectives of relationship).
See also
- Absolute (philosophy)
- Alternate history
- Allegory of the Cave
- Anti-realism
- Authenticity
- Roland Barthes
- Consensus reality
- Counterfactual history
- Delusion
- Derealization
- Dissociation
- Dream
- Empiricism
- Existence
- Fact
- Fact and fiction
- False awakening
- Fiction
- Fictionalism
- Imagination
- Hallucination
- Hyperreality
- Illusion
- Irrealism (the arts)
- Jorge Luis Borges
- Language and thought
- Lie
- Map–territory relation
- Mental representation
- Nihilism
- Normal
- Noumenon
- Objectivity (philosophy)
- Observer effect
- Ontology
- Paranormal
- Phenomenon
- Psychosis
- Rashomon effect
- Realism
- Real world
- Reality television
- Reification
- Representation (arts)
- Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
- Semiotics
- Simulacrum
- Simulated reality
- Skepticism
- Social constructionism
- Surrealism
- The truth of fiction
- Unreal
- Waking Life (film)