Experiences can be categorized into objective and subjective. Objective experiences can be right or wrong based on their representation of the physical world. For example, the appearance of a bent straw in water may be incorrect visually but correct in terms of its immersion. Subjective experiences relate to personal perception and are unique to each individual, not allowing for rightness or wrongness. The division between objective and subjective can be challenged, suggesting that the physical world may possess intrinsic qualities that our qualitative experiences could represent subtly.
The definition of 'objective' versus 'subjective' can help categorize experiences based on their ability to represent the physical world accurately or inaccurately.
Objective experiences can be deemed right or wrong depending on their representation of physical properties, such as the bending of a straw in water.
Subjective experiences are unique to the individual; they relate to personal perception rather than an objective reality, lacking the ability to be right or wrong.
Challenging the objective-subjective division raises questions about the physical world's intrinsic qualities and the representation of subtle properties in our qualitative experiences.
Collection
[
|
...
]