Questions tagged [realism]

Realism is a view that the statements of a subject matter refer to what is real and therefore could be assigned a definite true or false valuation if we knew what that valuation should be. A realist need not be so for all subject matters but only for a select set of subject matters.

Roughly speaking, realism is one of three philosophical positions (the others being and ) on the status of universals -- please refer to the tag for a brief overview of what universals are.

Realists believe that universals are primarily derived from the "universal features of singular things" meaning that whatever universals are their ontological location (where they are in the world so to speak) is within or before things-in-themselves. Universals, according to realists, primarily inhere within or are situated before things in the world, as opposed to primarily within our minds as concepts or labels. The position of within is referred to as universalia in re (‘universals in the thing’). The position of before as universalia ante rem (‘universals before the thing’). The latter position, where universals are asserted to exist mind independently and thing independently is more or less that of .

The following are some sources of information on realism.

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What is realism? Or: Is realism real?

In a very flat manner, my question would be: what is realism in philosophy, which movements and authors belong to realism, and what does it oppose to? But here are the precise issues that pop up each time I encounter "realism": It seems realism is…
Starckman
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Mathematical and Physical Spaces

I think that mathematical spaces that are homeomorphic to the Euclidean space are physically real. By extension, all mathematical spaces that are homeomorphic to such spaces would also part of the extended physical reality. The advantage of such…
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Searle - Direct Realism - what's the justification?

Here's a video of an interview with Searle: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KiAAVDv2w7A Watch 3:27 where he says we have direct perceptual access to the real world. I have difficulty understanding this... Take someone who's blind... or an organism…
Ameet Sharma
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Why do Object Oriented Philosophers write so much about Kant?

I never read anything by Kant cover to cover, but a lecturer told me no one would think he was consistently right now, anyway. But Kant is taken very seriously by OOP, if only so that they can debunk him. But why? I have even seen it said in OOP…
user6917