Physical Reality, Language, and the Cinderella Problem

This article identifies, and explores the nature of, a number of “explanatory gaps” between our conception of physical reality and our cultural understanding, in particular our understanding of language and experience of reality. Some suggestions are made to address those gaps. On the one hand, cert...

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Main Author: Paul Rastall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The International Academic Forum 2019-06-01
Series:IAFOR Journal of Arts & Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-arts-and-humanities/volume-6-issue-1/article-5/
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spelling doaj-be59b1dec88243aa9b021f54769c61f52020-11-25T00:46:47Zeng The International Academic ForumIAFOR Journal of Arts & Humanities2187-06162187-06162019-06-0161416110.22492/ijah.6.1.05Physical Reality, Language, and the Cinderella ProblemPaul Rastall0independent scholar, UKThis article identifies, and explores the nature of, a number of “explanatory gaps” between our conception of physical reality and our cultural understanding, in particular our understanding of language and experience of reality. Some suggestions are made to address those gaps. On the one hand, certain positions in physical science are widely accepted; physical monism, the commonality of behaviour, reality at a quantum level, biological entities as temporary clusters of atoms held together by energy fields, and “facts” as constructs. On the other hand, reality as we experience it is “of many sorts” (Popper, 1972); neither physical nor perceptual, but verbally constructed, “unreal” in any physical or historical sense. Language is rooted in sociality and qualitatively different from other forms of communication. The article identifies and considers some major disparities and some tentative ways of reconciling them. In particular, it addresses the disparity between physical reality and fiction or purely imaginary reality (the “Cinderella Problem”) through the notions “what if...?” and “as if”.https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-arts-and-humanities/volume-6-issue-1/article-5/physical monisminteractionsmodel-dependent realismimaginary realityverbally constructed realitysocialityproblem-solvingcommunication models
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul Rastall
spellingShingle Paul Rastall
Physical Reality, Language, and the Cinderella Problem
IAFOR Journal of Arts & Humanities
physical monism
interactions
model-dependent realism
imaginary reality
verbally constructed reality
sociality
problem-solving
communication models
author_facet Paul Rastall
author_sort Paul Rastall
title Physical Reality, Language, and the Cinderella Problem
title_short Physical Reality, Language, and the Cinderella Problem
title_full Physical Reality, Language, and the Cinderella Problem
title_fullStr Physical Reality, Language, and the Cinderella Problem
title_full_unstemmed Physical Reality, Language, and the Cinderella Problem
title_sort physical reality, language, and the cinderella problem
publisher The International Academic Forum
series IAFOR Journal of Arts & Humanities
issn 2187-0616
2187-0616
publishDate 2019-06-01
description This article identifies, and explores the nature of, a number of “explanatory gaps” between our conception of physical reality and our cultural understanding, in particular our understanding of language and experience of reality. Some suggestions are made to address those gaps. On the one hand, certain positions in physical science are widely accepted; physical monism, the commonality of behaviour, reality at a quantum level, biological entities as temporary clusters of atoms held together by energy fields, and “facts” as constructs. On the other hand, reality as we experience it is “of many sorts” (Popper, 1972); neither physical nor perceptual, but verbally constructed, “unreal” in any physical or historical sense. Language is rooted in sociality and qualitatively different from other forms of communication. The article identifies and considers some major disparities and some tentative ways of reconciling them. In particular, it addresses the disparity between physical reality and fiction or purely imaginary reality (the “Cinderella Problem”) through the notions “what if...?” and “as if”.
topic physical monism
interactions
model-dependent realism
imaginary reality
verbally constructed reality
sociality
problem-solving
communication models
url https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-arts-and-humanities/volume-6-issue-1/article-5/
work_keys_str_mv AT paulrastall physicalrealitylanguageandthecinderellaproblem
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