- Jul 30, 2005
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I am having a difficult time understanding all of the fuss over subjective and objective. The culture that I have lived in values objectivity and therefore I often hear/read the phrase "objective reality". Maybe I am completely misunderstanding the phrase, but it seems to imply one or more of the following:
a.) Only the objective is real.
b.) While the non-objective can be real, the objective is the only thing reliable enough for living life.
c.) The objective is more real than the non-objective.
I would say that c.) is absurd--since when are there degrees of reality?
On the other hand, speaking of the objective, the objective facts seem to say that b.) is false. My guess would be that 90% of behavior is based on the non-objective. Yet, most people function more than adequately.
Then there is a.). What a.) means is that, say, probably 99% of my experience every time I have gone to Great American Ballpark and watched the Cincinnati Reds is not real. If only the objective is real then only things like the numbers on the scoreboard, the time of day that the first pitch was thrown, etc. are real. It means that things like the way that I anticipated more fireworks after yet another Reds home run and the way that I laughed inside when I realized that the Reds had hit so many home runs that they had run out of fireworks are not real. Other than objective things like seeing numbers on the scoreboard nobody else experienced those games the same way that I did. So that means that other than those objective things everybody's experience was not real?
If both the objective and subjective are real, then why do we drag reality into it? Is there objective non-reality?
It seems to me that "objective" and "subjective" are all that is needed.
Of course, there is the question of truth. But can something be true but not real?
A lot of people seem to have the attitude that only the objective has merit. But I bet that those same people listen to friends and relatives tell stories, share feelings, etc. and do not demand that such stories and feelings be tested according to some standard of objectivity. They probably simply do things like laugh.
People simply smile, laugh, etc. when I tell them about what went through my mind at Reds games. They certainly do not demand objective verification.
Yet, many would seem to have us believe that the subjective should all be taken with a grain of salt and that only the objective is truly worthy of our attention.
a.) Only the objective is real.
b.) While the non-objective can be real, the objective is the only thing reliable enough for living life.
c.) The objective is more real than the non-objective.
I would say that c.) is absurd--since when are there degrees of reality?
On the other hand, speaking of the objective, the objective facts seem to say that b.) is false. My guess would be that 90% of behavior is based on the non-objective. Yet, most people function more than adequately.
Then there is a.). What a.) means is that, say, probably 99% of my experience every time I have gone to Great American Ballpark and watched the Cincinnati Reds is not real. If only the objective is real then only things like the numbers on the scoreboard, the time of day that the first pitch was thrown, etc. are real. It means that things like the way that I anticipated more fireworks after yet another Reds home run and the way that I laughed inside when I realized that the Reds had hit so many home runs that they had run out of fireworks are not real. Other than objective things like seeing numbers on the scoreboard nobody else experienced those games the same way that I did. So that means that other than those objective things everybody's experience was not real?

If both the objective and subjective are real, then why do we drag reality into it? Is there objective non-reality?
It seems to me that "objective" and "subjective" are all that is needed.
Of course, there is the question of truth. But can something be true but not real?
A lot of people seem to have the attitude that only the objective has merit. But I bet that those same people listen to friends and relatives tell stories, share feelings, etc. and do not demand that such stories and feelings be tested according to some standard of objectivity. They probably simply do things like laugh.
People simply smile, laugh, etc. when I tell them about what went through my mind at Reds games. They certainly do not demand objective verification.
Yet, many would seem to have us believe that the subjective should all be taken with a grain of salt and that only the objective is truly worthy of our attention.
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