I don't think etymology is futile, but I can see why you'd say that. You may as well say that arguing is futile; arguing is based in language; and word meanings change.
Ah, but it isn't: arguing is (ideally) based on
concepts. The words used to describe them change, yes, but this should be obvious to anyone reading an argument from, say, two hundred years ago.
Etymology is a way of keeping an anchor on things, given that word meanings can be defined interpersonally, and each ring of persons who use certain words can lead to different meanings for each words, and that's the problem. We should stick to etymology, I think, or everything's madness. Granted, the morphology of words clearly deviates from words' etymology. I just think on the "big" questions, we should stick to etymology, or we're all going to be insane.
I disagree. If we stick to etymology, then the English language would become incomprehensible. Etymology tells us the semantical roots of a particular word or phrase, but that doesn't tell us what it means
now. A prime example is the word 'gay': it meant 'happy' or 'full of mirth' from pre-C13[sup]th[/sup] till only half a century ago, but is now synonymous with 'homosexual' (which has been a secondary meaning since the 1880s).
My point is that as historically instructive as etymology is, it makes no sense to appeal to what a word
used to mean in a semantical debate.
That said, I consider true reality a redundancy; the word "reality" already implies truth.
It is to distinguish what we
percieve to be from what
actually is. The former is our percieved reality, and the latter is the real reality. Naturally, the latter is synonymous with 'reality' in the truest sense of the word.
What I'm essentially saying is that you can't define reality in relation to existence, or existence in relation to reality. Both of these terms imply something deeper -- and this is objectivity. And when you really get down to it, objectivity can't be explained at all; it can't be defined. The instant you start defining, you are seeped in objectivity. But objectivity can't be subjective, or else it ceases being objectivity. Objectivity is the axiomatic, ineffable underpinning to everything potentially true -- for existence and reality are based in our unveiling them. Nothing is true or real or existent in a vacuum; something is true/false, real/imagined, or existent/nonexistent through our interpretation of objectivity.
Or, to put it another way, Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem has buggered us all.
Received said:
I guess you could define reality according to whether or not what we perceive lines up directly with objectivity, rather than being mediated by a false world constructed by the robots or demons. Obviously, we can't know whether we're deceived in this way. What then?
What then? Our would journey be finished, my friend. We would have defined reality, albiet uselessly.
Received said:
We have to define reality in accordance with the construct the demon or the Matrix creates. "Real" becomes "what the demon/Matrix really intended," even if objectively there is a deeper reality beyond this construct.
I disagree. The whole reason such difficulties exist is because 'reality' is taken to mean the
ultimate reality, the fundamentals obeyed by the 'top-level' demon (even if such demons are our own minds).
Received said:
Fortunately, pragmatically we have to rule out these possibilities. They're completely unfalsifiable, and so we're wasting our time thinking of them. We have no reason not to assume that objectivity is "right beyond our sensations".
Nor do we have any reason to assume that our sensations allude are any indication of what reality is like. Yes, those scenarios are remotely unlikely, but they are nonetheless possible. In an absolutist discussion such as this, who are we to arrogantly dismiss them?