Either reality is objective or subjective. You don't impose an objectivity, as that would make it subjective. If reality is objective then it is objective because it holds true for everything, not because we impose anything on reality... It would be objective whether we existed or not.
The general argument is that if the objective reality exists then we can only ever perceive/experience it through our senses and thus we "observe" only a subjective version of reality, but that there is an objective reality being perceived. Our senses are like indestructible wall-paper covering the wall of objective reality: we can get close to understanding it, or so the argument goes.
Some on the other hand claim that reality is entirely subjective, that there is no wall behind the wall-paper, and the wall-paper is in fact a construct entirely of our mind.
I'm sure that means something to you... Care to explain, or even raise in another thread?
The bolded part is your unwarranted assumption.
In using the term "something imposing this order" are you not already implying the existence of something external? If so, then whatit fails to address is the possibility that there is nothing external imposing this order with law, but that the order is an inherent part of existence itself. Without it there might be no existence, so a universe capable of existing, even if self-caused, would have to have order inherent within it sufficient to maintain its existence.
With regard your second sentence, this only logically follows if you already assume an external creator, otherwise the existence of order itself is insufficient to warrant such a conclusion, as just argued.
As for your last sentence, when you use the term "chaos" what exactly are you referring to, because in physics it means something quote specific (sensitivity to initial conditions that result in the appearance of randomness etc) that does indeed exist in complex systems, such as the weather system, and at the simplest level a double rod pendulum.
If you merely mean "disorder" then if it exists within a realm that has a level of inherent order (i.e. behaves according to laws inherent within its existence) then it will tend towards order... but this speaks nothing of where those laws came from.
To argue otherwise, as you do, stems from the introduction of assumptions that are unsupported.
Either reality is objective or subjective. You don't impose an objectivity, as that would make it subjective. If reality is objective then it is objective because it holds true for everything, not because we impose anything on reality.
No, I do not think its either or. These two perceptions are the ones that create conflict and materialism, the bane of the world. You impose objectivity until you realize you are being deluded by sense experience, just as you are deluded by dreams that they are real. Obviously it does not hold true because to each one of us, our objective view arises from sense experience and my world through sense experience will never be your world. But if I realize that objectivity is a creation of sense experience, it helps me to understand the world better. Its like saying,’ A man is wiser who knows he is a fool’ When you acknowledge that your sense experience is all you have, and therefore ‘personal’ you will more easily accept the possibility that you are wrong on many things, and then it leads you to search fro truth. But as long as you think ‘objective world’ exists, you unfortunately set yourself up and you will be mislead.
Our senses are like indestructible wall-paper covering the wall of objective reality: we can get close to understanding it, or so the argument goes. Some on the other hand claim that reality is entirely subjective, that there is no wall behind the wall-paper, and the wall-paper is in fact a construct entirely of our mind.
No. our senses are not like indestructible wall-paper covering the wall of objective reality. Rather they are creators of a non-existent wall.
My opinion is the Reality is neither subjective, nor objective, but a Unity.
I'm sure that means something to you... Care to explain, or even raise in another thread?
Take for example the dream reality. When he is asleep, we find that the Mind of Man, is a generator of a reality we call “Dream State” This reality, generated by the mind, seems quite real to us, when we are asleep. The dream reality replicate the reality we find ourselves in when we arise. In the dream reality, everything we experience assumes total authenticity. It appears so real, such that its impossible to imagine that all that all that we experience in the dreamland, the people we meet, the places we go to, the things we do, is all generated by the mind. Nobody knows he is dreaming when he is in dream state. Its difficult to consciously recognize when in the dream state, that we are all that has happened in the dream reality. That we were the people, the places, and the things that we did. That we were both, the
generators, and
experiencers of the dream reality. In our dream state, our mind behave as it its receiving sensory data, just as in the waking stated, and these senses appear to function just as well as if we were awake. We can see, smell, touch, taste, etc. In that dream state, our mind convince us that this drama unfolding in the dream state we are experiencing, is “real” “true” and “out there” differentiated from us, who are experiencing it. That this dream reality, is disconnected from us, and separate and apart from us, and we are merely experiencing it. It appears objective and physical, and indifferent to us as
subjective observers . Yet, when we wake up, this illusion disappears. We find that it was all a dream. Whatever happened, the people we met, the things we did, that it was all “us”. We were these people, we were these places, we were the things, and we were these experiences. Our mind generated all this reality. It did not exist, apart from our mind. The mind expressed, it, and experienced it.
Now, in our waking state, we find ourselves in another reality, exactly which appears as a replication of the dream reality. In this reality, our senses, convince our minds that this reality we are now experiencing in our wakeful state, is real. Its out there, its true. Its physically separate, and disconnected from us. It exists apart from us. That we are mare its observers, who have a subjective experience of the separate, objective and disconnected reality. However, one thing we have just found out is that this waking reality is as much a generation of our mind, though our senses experiences, just as the dream reality is a generation of the same mind when it was asleep. This waking reality, is a reality perceived through our sensory organs, which our mind impose objectivity , and interpret as existing out there. Our senses tells us that whatever is out there, be it “things” or “people” is separate from us. Yet, this reality, the waking reality, is as much a generation of the mind just as the dream reality. Without the mind interpreting these sensory data, thus experiencing this reality, we cannot tell what these “things in themselves are”. The main question is this; why, should we accept this waking reality as the true reality, and reject the dream realty as an illusion, yet, both are a creation of the same mind? The point is, if at all, when we woke up we found that all that we dream was us, why should we accept the waking reality, any less a dream reality, than the reality generated when we are asleep? If the dream reality is a subjective experience, and the waking reality apparently is also a subjective experience, where, then, do we draw the line of differentiation? What makes waking reality any less a dream state?