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  1. 5 de oct. de 2006 · This book considers the relation between metaphysics, our conception of the constitution of reality, and semantics, the theory that explains how statements are determined as true or as false in terms of their composition out of their constituent expressions.

    • Where The Conflict Between Perception and Reality Lies in The Brain
    • The Stories Our Brain Tells Are Influenced by Life Experience
    • Neuroscience Is Deeply Humbling

    My colleague Sigal Samuel recently explored the neuroscience of meditation(link is external). During her reporting, she found good evidence that a regular meditation practice is associated with increased compassion. That evidence, she writes, “feel[s] like a challenge, even a dare. If it takes such a small amount of time and effort to get better at...

    The brain tells us a story about the motion of objects. But that’s not the only story it tells. It also tells us stories about more complicated aspects of our visual world, like color. For some meta-insight, look at the illusion below from Japanese psychologist and artist Akiyoshi Kitaoka. You can observe your own brain, in real time, change its gu...

    I don’t want people to read this and think we can’t believe our eyes, or we can’t incorporate evidence into our thinking. We can seek out verified sources of information. We can turn to expertise and also earnestly question it. (Don’t let people gaslight you, either — another phenomenon that preys on the brain’s tendency to generate illusory though...

  2. William Shakespeare. Shakespeare” = “the guy other people call William. This emphasises that to know the meaning of a name is the ã result of this original event or grounding of the name. The name itself doesn’t really “mean” anything- it “points” to an ã individual. ã It explains somewhat why names are arbitrary.

  3. 11 de nov. de 2009 · An account of reality that - in a self-immunizing way - focuses more and more on the well-defined aspects of reality amounts at the end to a mental and cultural situation that could be described as a “facticity imprisonment”.

    • Albrecht von Müller
    • avm@parmenides-foundation.org
    • 2010
  4. reality actually “takes place” postulates two complementary aspects. There is a “factual aspect of reality” which is characterized by well-defined predications, causal closure, and local spacetime. But there is a complementary, “statu-nascendi” aspect of reality which addresses how facts, and with them local spacetime, come

  5. 1 de ene. de 2007 · PDF | On Jan 1, 2007, Benjamin Murphy published Thought and Reality | Find, read and cite all the research you need on ResearchGate