Are you done with this posturing? Okay, let's apply a critical eye once again to your many points of confusion.
In other words, the material world only. Only something with physical form. The fallacy of this of course is you define reality based on your subjective idea of it. It was defined in the mental space, not defined by the exterior world itself. It is instead your subjective, non-material idea puting a wrapper of its own assumptions, it's own imaginations, around the exterior world and calling that "reality". It then seeks for external confirmation of its assumptions to support its mistaken perception that it's not the origin of its own assumptions.
The mind of course will naturally block out anything that doesn't fit that assumption as "unreal" to protect its investment in
truth, and you end up with you calling my challenges to this "unreality" of yours as all manner of obfuscations, world salads, or whatever other thing you can think to push back against this, even trying to insult my personal integrity. Make it about me personally, that always seems to work for you when something is too uncomfortable to look at...
Ideas in our head do have actual existence, whether or not they have any external referent. The images in the mind, are actually in there. We actually see them. They have actual form. They have actual existence. We consider them. We process them. We interpret them. There is most assuredly something there existing in the mind. You cannot say it does not exist. It is being "thought". They are real thoughts. They create what is perceived to be reality to us.
I think maybe what you are hoping to say is that only the material world is "valid", or "true". This is why I have brought "truth" into this. Because underlying all your talk about "reality", it seems you define that as "true reality", or a "valid interpretation of reality". All of this is reality, even complete fictions in the mind. That defines reality for the person thinking it. Just as "reality" to you is defined by your subjective mind as "only physical".
Once you start to see this, it puts these mental assumptions on the hot seat, and that makes the ego mighty upset that it's all important authority is being called into question, and it lashes out to preserve itself. But to really critically examine it, as I have been doing, will expose the ultimate fallacy of it's own self-referential logic. "Reality has nothing to do with what I think!," thinks the thinking itself.
BTW, what you call obscuring, I, and many others, call deconstructing the fallacy. Nagarjuna famously would do this, so insult this all you want if it helps distract from examining it.
No problem with this.
And here's where it gets interesting, and I keep hoping you'll come along with me to this point. You said, "being consciously present". That is the real caveat there. We aren't 99.9999% of the time! 99.9999% of the time we are in our thought worlds about the world. We are not actually seeing the world, but our ideas about the world, even as we are looking right at. We make judgments about it, and call that reality.
This is exactly what you are doing in your idea that only the material world is actual reality. You're not seeing actual reality. You're overlaying your thought about it, and then it blends away right into the thing itself and the mind doesn't recognize its own image in.
I'm sorry, what? How do you have any perspective at all, if you aren't present in it? Any perspective at all, requires a subjective seer.
This God perspective you detail, would still be
Subjective. It's not independent from the Seer. And that is, and has been my point from the get-go here. It's all Subjectively held. That its God's perspective, simply means that it is a "clear" perspective, not one obscured by the normal illusions of the mind. Overcoming those obscurities, gives you God's perspective, or that of the Seer. We see reality as it is, without judgment of what it is. There is no thought ideas wrapping its image of itself around that which is seen.
I explained why it can be called objective, but I think you didn't follow it. I'll try again in perhaps simpler terms. Intersubjectivity, a "we space" you could call it, is something that is not any one of the individuals creating it, but has an existence that is a collective reality in and of itself, greater than any one individual participating within it. To the individuals, this reality is both outside of themselves, and within themselves. They can talk about that "space" between themselves as something objective. Culture is an objective reality, even though it is created by the individuals participating in it.
That is what makes it objective reality. It plays that role in our lives just as the tree is objectively there for our car to hit. It does not need physical form for it to be an objective reality. Make sense?
It's in understandings like this, where you will begin to have the context in which to understand everything else I am talking about. Hence why I chose to focus on some key points, rather than burden our discussion with "wordy" replies, as you put it. Let's clarify things first. So, do you have issues with this point still?
First, not only are you wrong in believing that this "style" of writing in all-caps adds value or weight to your points, you're also wrong in what you stated. Mental constructs absolutely are observable. If you are examining your thoughts, you are observing them. They are objects of thought and have an objective reality for you to look at them.
If you are thinking, that is a 1st person experience. If you pause to look at the thoughts that arise from thinking, those are now objective realities being the thinking mind can examine, no different than picking up a rock and looking at its stridations from a 3rd person perspective.
And this realization is a very early part of differentiating the subjective self, from the content of thought itself, mistakenly perceived as an extension of the reality of the self, confusing the seer with the seen. We see our thoughts, but we are not our thoughts. We have thoughts, but we are not our thoughts. The error is when we embed our sense of self within our thoughts. We "think" we are our thoughts, which is the illusion of the mind.
If thoughts are not observable, then how do you do any form of self-reflection? If you've ever meditated, you can witness your thoughts rising and falling like waves on the ocean. You realize they are "its", not "you".
And yet, you interact with your thoughts all the time. Sounds plenty real enough to me, despite you artificially defining reality as that which occupies space and time, using that illusion of the mind to define truth and reality. You recognize conceptions as illusion, and yet you use them to define what is real? This just will not do.
Oh yes, certainly they have real properties, and yes they do manifest in the physical world. It's very simple. How do you measure love in the physical world? Look at its effects. Does it lead to the modification of behaviors? Then it has an existence in reality, that manifests in form.
Here's a simple explanation that can be found in what Ghandi said,
"Your beliefs become your thoughts.
Your thoughts become your words.
Your words become your actions.
Your actions become your habits.
Your habits become your values.
Your values become your destiny."
It's a little mind boggling in a way how people call thoughts and beliefs not reality, when they have such a very, very direct cause and effect relationship with the world. Being non-material, does not make them non-real, as you have explicitly stated on several occasions.
No it doesn't. I represents the collective beliefs of a group. Their behaviors are manifestations of those non-material beliefs in material forms.