Our senses include the classic five (vision, hearing, smell, taste, touch). These senses work together, often influencing each other, to help us build a coherent picture of reality.
Because perception depends on brain processing and prior knowledge, what we perceive is not a direct mirror of the external world, but a constructed experience filtered and shaped by our nervous system and past experiences.
If we have different understandings of reality, then what is real in an objective sense? Can science answer this question?
According to modern physics, especially quantum theory, reality is not simply the world of definite objects and properties we experience daily. Instead, at its foundation, reality is described by abstract mathematical entities representing a range of possible events or states, existing in a quantum realm of probabilities rather than certainties.
Seems like science (with regards to Quantum Mechanics) considers reality as something abstract. Can we just accept that it's something we can't comprehend?
Join me in the discussion of what is real through different perspectives. To support the establishment, please purchase something during the conversation. See you!