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The impossible quest for ultimate reality
The impossible quest for ultimate reality

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If common sense tells us one thing, science another, and rational reflection, philosophy, disagrees with both, what are we to do? If reason leads us to believe that all of reality is one great whole, with no parts, can we . . .

If common sense tells us one thing, science another, and rational reflection, philosophy, disagrees with both, what are we to do? If reason leads us to believe that all of reality is one great whole, with no parts, can we accept its conclusion?  Michael Della Rocca, Tim Maudlin and Kathleen Higgins test the limits of philosophy at HowTheLightGetsIn.  “I will teach you differences.” Ludwig Wittgenstein, Philosophical InvestigationsWhat if someone told you that the world you see around you isn’t real? That the commotion and the change, the multiplicity of people and nations, breaking news and TikTok videos were all an illusion because, ultimately, change itself is not real and everything is one? You’d likely think the person relaying this story had a mystical experience of some kind, induced by a heroic dose of a potent psychedelic drug. But back in Ancient Greece, a philosopher called Parmenides argued that this is simply the rational conclusion of caref…

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