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Essentially it simply means "of or about the object." It's a manner of speaking and thinking about things that casts them in a light to be a thing in themselves, a light that is a reflection of truth.I dont get warm fuzzy feelings that we understand very well what is objective but we certainly know a Lot and that leads many down the path that knowing a lot is objective. So a bit of an open ended question what is objective?
Essentially it simply means "of or about the object." It's a manner of speaking and thinking about things that casts them in a light to be a thing in themselves, a light that is a reflection of truth.
I dont get warm fuzzy feelings that we understand very well what is objective but we certainly know a Lot and that leads many down the path that knowing a lot is objective. So a bit of an open ended question what is objective?
Yes I think Kant had the generally right idea with a whole lot of words..Kant realized that all knowledge has 3 components:
The subject (knower)
The object (that which is known)
and the phenomenon of knowing which unites the other two.
Phenomenology then uses the concept of combined inter-subjective knowledge.
So multiple persons (subjects) will come to realize that (for example) the law of gravity
has objective existence beyond the subjects themselves.
Thus the word noumenon is used to describe something that has existence in-and-of-itself.
It does not require a subject to know it as phenomenon in order for it to exist.
Though of course, we cannot be utterly certain that such noumena actually exist
because we always are subjects with a subjective perspective.
But it is functional to assume noumenon exist: that is truly entirely objective facts devoid of a subject.
A clear example is mathematics. Its laws are so perfect that they for all intents and purposes
they keep the planets in orbit around the Sun. If they did not exist, or for one split second faltered...
Me and Not me are objective,
Essentially it simply means "of or about the object." It's a manner of speaking and thinking about things that casts them in a light to be a thing in themselves, a light that is a reflection of truth.
An easy enough idea difficult to pin down and interestingly huge divergent views of a multiplicity of perceived objective perspectives. That's the curious part to me.Objectivity is a central philosophical concept, related to reality and truth, which has been variously defined by sources. Generally, objectivity means the state or quality of being true even outside of a subject's individual biases, interpretations, feelings, and imaginings. A proposition is generally considered objectively true (to have objective truth) when its truth conditions are met without biases caused by feelings, ideas, opinions, etc., of a sentient subject. A second, broader meaning of the term refers to the ability in any context to judge fairly, without partiality or external influence. This second meaning of objectivity is sometimes used synonymously with neutrality.
Source: Wikipedia
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Everything is the subjective.
It is an important mental construct to make in order to protect against delusion.That one can make something the objective creates a subject/object split that is only a mental construct.
The ability to form and understand conceptual thought takes place within the subjective mind. Without this, you lose your sentience.In reality, no separation exists between you and anything in the Universe, as everything that you are is 100% a part of the Universe.
If your consciousness ended at the object, you would not be able to be aware of and/or conscious of the object.Your consciousness does not end at some point and the object begins. If you think it does, can you demonstrate at which point this occurs?
I wouldn't go so far as to call the impersonal view as "universal." A view can be free from subjective overlay (impersonal,) but that does not imply that the view is by any means "holistically complete." (Have to be careful in treading in this area.) I do agree that an impersonal view can be a valid descriptor of our shared reality.The definitions should be changed to personal/impersonal to denote the illusory 'I' as being a personal view, and consciousness without 'I' as impersonal view, and therefore, universal view.
I think it's cohesion by which molecules and atoms arrange making it "solid" and therefore subject to our senses. Being that things build up and break down, that objectivity remains dynamic.I dont get warm fuzzy feelings that we understand very well what is objective but we certainly know a Lot and that leads many down the path that knowing a lot is objective. So a bit of an open ended question what is objective?
I wouldn't go so far as to call the impersonal view as "universal." A view can be free from subjective overlay (impersonal,) but that does not imply that the view is by any means "holistically complete." (Have to be careful in treading in this area.) I do agree that an impersonal view can be a valid descriptor of our shared reality.
I would agree with you that everything is subjectively processed. This allows for existence outside of your mind. (If a tree falls in the forest and no one is there to hear it, does it make a sound? Yes! imo)
If your consciousness ended at the object, you would not be able to be aware of and/or conscious of the object.
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We do, however, seem to have a common reality we all share, whether it is real or virtual.All experience is subjective, and thus it is logically impossible to be certain that an objective reality exists. We might have good reasons to believe one exists, but we cannot be certain of it. Consequently, to posit that there exists an objective reality is metaphysical speculation.
Semantics. (Do you like that pun?)There are pressure waves, but no sound. For sound to occur, a receptor such as an ear must be present to detect the sound, and a processor, such as a brain, is required to interpret what the receptor detected. But even then, there is only the registration of the pressure waves. What is finally needed is consciousness.
Sorry, that bruise on your skin shaped like wrench that appeared while you were unconscious obviously doesn't exist, since no one was conscious to witness it happening.Therefore all objects are included in consciousness.
Semantics. (Do you like that pun?)
Sorry, that bruise on your skin shaped like wrench that appeared while you were unconscious obviously doesn't exist, since no one was conscious to witness it happening.
All phenomena arise and cease due to dependent co-arising, are impermanent, and are therefore empty of self-nature. Or as the Taoists would say, "the only constant is change."There is no such agent of consciousness; there is only consciousness itself, permeating all of existence through and through. The consciousness with which you view the external physical world is not the consciousness of 'I'; it is universal consciousness sculpted to appear as 'I'. It is this sculpted consciousness that thinks itself a separate observer of the observation. I meant it when I said that there is a universal consciousness at the base of existence. It is the fundamental reality. Only the sculpted consciousness we call 'I' and 'thou' is illusory. IOW, there is no 'experiencer of the experience'; there is only the experience itself.
Certainly you are familiar with the Heart Sutra, which says that:
'all phenomena, including ourselves, are empty of inherent self-nature'.
and...
"form is emptiness;
emptiness if form"
All phenomena arise and cease due to dependent co-arising, are impermanent, and are therefore empty of self-nature. Or as the Taoists would say, "the only constant is change."
Being objective (back to the OP) is about becoming disenchanted with these things:
From the Phena Sutta: Foam
"Now suppose that a magician or magician's apprentice were to display a magic trick at a major intersection, and a man with good eyesight were to see it, observe it, & appropriately examine it. To him — seeing it, observing it, & appropriately examining it — it would appear empty, void, without substance: for what substance would there be in a magic trick? In the same way, a monk sees, observes, & appropriately examines any consciousness that is past, future, or present; internal or external; blatant or subtle; common or sublime; far or near. To him — seeing it, observing it, & appropriately examining it — it would appear empty, void, without substance: for what substance would there be in consciousness?
"Seeing thus, the well-instructed disciple of the noble ones grows disenchanted with form, disenchanted with feeling, disenchanted with perception, disenchanted with fabrications, disenchanted with consciousness. Disenchanted, he grows dispassionate. Through dispassion, he's released. With release there's the knowledge, 'Released.' He discerns that 'Birth is ended, the holy life fulfilled, the task done. There is nothing further for this world.'"
That is what the Blessed One said. Having said that, the One Well-Gone, the Teacher, said further:
Form is like a glob of foam;
feeling, a bubble;
perception, a mirage;
fabrications, a banana tree;
consciousness, a magic trick — this has been taught by the Kinsman of the Sun.
However you observe them, appropriately examine them, they're empty, void to whoever sees them appropriately.