GrumpyCatFace wrote:BjornP wrote:GrumpyCatFace wrote:
The effects can be predictable and objective, but your perception of them is entirely subjective.
There is no “sound” of the rifle firing, only air vibrations interpreted by the brain as such. There is an “impact” of the bullet on the pre-existing systems of your body, but it’s merely a reordering of molecules. There’s no objective “meaning” to the event, though you can predict what will happen.
So because sound is "only" air vibrations, there isn't
really a sound? Not objectively so? And because the impact is "merely" a
re-ordering of molecules, there is no objective trauma to the body to body due to force of impact?
Or however it's supposed to be understood. After all, you admit that the effects can be objective and predictable. Meaning "
everything" is not actually subjective, after all.
Not everything, no. But there is no "objective reality". There are only layers of reality, depending on what you look at.
To continue the analogy, there is
no "body" - merely a collection of chemicals, which are made up of atoms, which themselves are made up of subatomic particles, which themselves may just be vibrations on a string. It's all held together by electromagnetic energy, in complex bonds and patterns, few of which we even understand.
There is no absolute truth, only
mostly predictable results of interactions.
To broaden it a bit, look at a sunset. If you're in a happy mood, it's a beautiful, poetic thing that inspires deep thoughts. If you're alone in the wilderness, it's a terrifying countdown to darkness and oblivion. If you're orbiting the planet, it's just a line of darkness spreading across the globe.
The only "truth" about it, is that the planet is rotating away from its electromagnetic power source. Less radiation is hitting that area for a while. Nothing more.
Dude, you reject that there is a body, then go on describing the objective composition of the body.

Your argument is self-contradictory. You're saying that
because we are - objectively - a collection of chemicals made up of atoms, etc., we don't "really" have a body. You just
explained that we do! That "collection of chemicals, made up of atoms, etc. etc." is what we have given the shorter
name of "body". Simply naming something X, does not take away its objective nature. Calling the natural processes that make up a hurricane a "hurricane", does not take the fact of its nature away.
You keep saying things like we
"merely" are a collection of atoms, our bodies and minds
"just" a collection of chemicals, etc. Why use words like that? As if that was something that invalidates objectivity. Or as if being
biological itself, was some sort of
inferior state of being and only
something/someone else was able to judge the world objectively.
The last analogy is what most people would agree is a proper distinction between objective and subjective, however. The stars are balls of gas and energy, but that doesn't make them any less pretty to look, first one's objectivity and second observation subjectivity.
That analogy works, GCF. The "there is not really a body" analogy, does not.
Fame is not flattery. Respect is not agreement.