avwolf wrote:
Bugger all, how can I get this "imagination is reality" thing to work for me? 'Cause, you know, it'd be nice to wake up some morning next to a wolf girl, instead of alone.</snark>
More seriously, if what we imagine is reality, then why have all the negative consequences of so much of reality? Where does surprise fit in? After all, it's all your own conceptions. To reference the above, why don't I have a wolf girl wife right now? Unless reality is something outside of me, impressing itself on me, there's no reason for (my) reality to be different from my most pleasant dreams.
The problem with relative truth is that it is self-contradictory. The statement "All truth is relative," has a corollary, "There is no absolute truth." The problem is that the statement (and thus it's corollary, which is more obvious) is self-contradictory. In the land of rhetoric, we call that a logical fallacy. Now, if someone is silly enough to base their worldview on something which is easily demonstrable to be false, I suppose that's their prerogative, but I'd much prefer that my worldview be at least based on something that's, at the very least, a statistical unlikelihood. (Which would be what Richard Dawkins has defined God's existence as, so there we are -- my worldview is based on a statistical unlikelihood, just how I prefer it. :P)
Perception and reality are bound together, but not strongly or inexorably bound. Ask someone who has gone on an "acid trip," or taken other hallucinogens. What they perceived might have been quite different from reality. A blind person cannot perceive color as someone like myself does, but that does not mean that color is not real. If you close your eyes and stand up from your chair, taking a step forward, the chair has effectively left your perception. Has it ceased to exist? Just let yourself fall backward: I'll guarantee that reality asserts itself despite your inability to perceive the chair. What you are left with is memory and faith that your memory is still correct. It's possible that someone has replaced the chair with a mattress, or it "magically" was transmogrified into one. So if the only thing you trust is your perception and not on anything outside of it, you cannot make any assertion beyond what you are perceiving in this instant. That is obviously counter to all science and understanding. Perhaps it is simply because I am an engineer, and I count on things operating in the way I understand them to operate, but I find it ridiculous to try to define reality on something so limited and transient as perception.
If you really want to bind reality and perception or imagination, you have to do it like White Wolf did through "Paradox." The collective subconscious of everyone else enforces a sensible reality on you, which you may or may not contribute to, but attempting to break causes severe repercussions.
I understand what your saying, but are you not assuming that there are other entities around you that reality is relative to? You could be imagining a person telling you that what you are seeing is not real, after all.