The Foundation of Objectivism - why Objectivism is valid.

“Observation” is something that happens and requires a subject and an object. If a subject observes itself, then it is both the subject and the object. “Existence” refers to something that is, regardless whether it happens or not, and does not require a subject or an object, because it tells us merely about the fact whether something is or not.

Yes, which is why I corrected myself by saying that existence is not observation but that which is observed.

This is confusing to people because it implies that that which is not observed is not existence. Which is true. That which is not observed – the unobserved – is not existence. It is a hypothetical existence, that exists in the form of idea, that may or may not be educated.

That is not true.

“Hypothetical existence” is what someone proposes or guesses to be existence. There is a serious difference between what someone hypothesizes and what is actually there, else Science would be completely meaningless nonsense.

The concept that we associate with “existence” has nothing at all to do with observations other than occasional coincidence. By very, very far, most of existence is entirely unobserved, unknown, and unsuspected.

What someone hypothetically believes to exist is an entirely different issue than what actually does exist, else there would be no means to correct misperceptions. There has to be a reality beyond perception, else it is like saying that you don’t exist unless the government says that you exist.

I don’t like where this thread has gone, but I am not surprised.

I’m sorry, but I’m not here to discuss kindergarten level shit with people. If you still deny things like the existence of objective reality, and think that reality is somehow dependent on you observing it and stuff like that, then I really have nothing to say to you. You will either grow out of such positions by yourself, or you won’t at all. The ones who possess sufficient intelligence, rationality, and honesty, will do so by themselves, without the need for somebody else to have pages long discussions with them to try and talk them out of nonsense.

However, since I am in the mood, and I do think some basic things need to be said, I’ll discuss some of the less nonsensical nonsense. To the posts/parts of the posts I won’t reply and haven’t replied yet, it is either because I disagree with it too much to consider it worth addressing (mainly Prismatic), or I mostly agree with it and the disagreements would be more a matter of working out trivial details or clearing up the different ways we use language and minor misunderstandings (Crimson Crow, Magnus Anderson). Or I simply am not interested or haven’t even read them yet. Pick whatever option suits you.

Prismatic

I am unsure what you mean by “emergent” and “pre-existing”. Since reality is constant flux (change), you could say objects are constantly disappearing and emerging. However, on a more fundamental level the emerging of objects is simply atoms changing forms by rearranging themselves, and once they’ve done so to a sufficient degree that a human will recognize it as a different object, we will assign to it a different name, or add to it its name, if it is an object that interests us. For example, an apple, after undergoing the process of rotting, will have changed its internal structure differently enough to be called differently and recognized as different than before - so now it will be called a rotten apple. You could say that rotten apple emerged. But the rotten apple emerged as a consequence of its past interactions, on what pre-existed the rotten apple, which was an ordinary apple and an environment in which an apple rots.

Objects exist independently of subjects, yes. The external world isn’t driven by subjects. Species constantly go extinct and the external world continues existing. The external world isn’t dependent on being observed by humans or any other species or any particlar living organism for its existence. The ideas of objects are dependent for existence on human minds, but what the ideas refer to, objects themselves, are not, unless they are artifices - objects created and maintained by humans, but then again, they are not ONLY dependent on human perception, but also on human action to maintain those artifices. Moreover, neither objects nor ideas emerge spontaneously. There is a pattern to their emergence.

Subjectivism is a very useful tool in controlling the masses. If you manage to convince others that there is no external world independent of humans, and that reality is dependent on human minds, you can also effectively indoctrinate them into being dependent on what YOU say is the truth about objects, and since there is no external, independent standard that we all share (REALITY) according to this position, others are helpless as they have nothing to appeal to defend themselves with except their own subjectivity. However, usually those in power will try to enforce their own particular kind of subjectivity as superior, making themselves the “authority” on the matter where what they say is “officially approved fact” while what you say is “just your opinion, man”, regardless of what is actually true. They have successfully convinced you you cannot access the objective world yourself, using your own mind and senses, but that you need the validation of others, most likely some authority, telling you what is or isn’t true. Truth stops being based on the objectve, external world, and starts being based on the subjective thoughts about the objective world of people or groups of people, such as scientists. These statements MAY be actual truths and based on accurate observations of the objective world (if they followed the scientific method without error), or they can be lies told to be truths, either because of a mistake in reasoning, or intentional and for the sake of accomplishing social/political goals or avoiding condemnation.

For an objectivist and a realist, the objective world is the standard by which they judge whether what people say about the objective world is correct or not. For an objectivist/realist, if somebody says: “There is a unicorn in the corner of this room and the current authorities agree it is so”, but an objectivist/realist doesn’t see it, he will decide there is no unicorn and the authority is wrong.
For a subjectivist, what somebody else says about the objective world is the standard by which they judge what is correct or not about the objective world. If somebody says the same thing to a subjectivist, and the subjectivist doesn’t perceive a unicorn, he will nevertheless decide that there is a unicorn simply because the authority (be it media, government, science…) said so and therefore it must be so.
Usually the political elites decide the areas where people are allowed to think freely, and the limitations of free thought, according to their own agendas.

The idea that objects emerge spontaneously is also part of this manipulation because it denies one of the crucial aspects of objective reality - PATTERNS. There is no randomness, only patterns. When the outcome of something requires a calculation of factors too complex for humans to process, we say that the outcome is random, so randomness doesn’t mean “no patterns”, it means “I couldn’t find a pattern there”. I often use the example of a coin toss or a dice roll to explain this. The dice doesn’t behave according to magic, it is just as subject to laws of physics as anything else, wouldn’t you agree? The thing is that humans simply haven’t evolved the ability to calculate all possible factors (gravity, friction of the surface, air resistance) we need to know to predict the trajectory of the dice and thus its outcome. This makes it random. However, in principle it is possible that scientists design a machine which would calculate all those factors before the throw, so the machine would know exactly at which height to throw it, using what amount of force, etc. for it to land on a particular number.

Denying the existence of patterns and claiming it’s all about spontaneity is also useful if you want to make people oblivious to reality for some reason and incapable to predict things by shrouding everything in mysticism, possibly to exploit that ignorance for your own ends.

And when speaking of “assuming” the existence of objects, it is only reasonable to be uncertain and assume if you aren’t directly perceiving the objects and have an actual reason to doubt their existence. If a lion is biting off your hand, it is stupid to say you just “assume” it, we save the word “assume” for situations when you are less certain about things. For example, if a lion escaped the zoo and you live close to the zoo, you may “assume” that the lion is somewhere nearby because you aren’t actually seeing it. This may or may not be a reasonable assumption based on how far away you live and other factors, but I think we can agree that for practical reasons it is a good assumption to make to avoid potential harm. Using the word which implies a weak level of certainty such as “assume” to speak about things which are evident to a person due to simple perception and thus merit a high level of certainty, is just another one of sneaky ways of making people detached from reality by fucking up their fundamental epistemological principles and making them more prone to being convinced in bullshit.

Sure, what is evident and in your face is just an assumption, and what the official philosophical authorities tell you, namely “what is evident and in your face is an assumption” itself is somehow not a mere assumption but, for some yet to be explained reason, carries a higher level of certainty than what your senses tell you, which are mere assumptions (low level of certainty). Our senses, which evolved to help us survive and connect us to the world, are lying to us, while those who can benefit from lying to us, and thus have a motive to do so, must be telling us truth. Hmmm.

The thing is, what is an assumption and what is more than an assumption, is determined by an objective world. We say something is an assumption when we use healthy senses to recognize patterns in the objective world. If I say “there is a car X not more than 20 meters away from me”, and I know I own car X and have it in a garage within that distance, and I’ve just checked on it 5 seconds ago, then it is not a mere assumption, it is a statement of truth. If I’m saying that after coming back home and not seeing the car for hours, the statement is less certain borders on being an assumption, as the car might have been stolen, but the probability of that happening is low. If somebody else in my family told me there is a 50-50% chance they’ll use the car, I’d say in that case the statement has crossed into the assumption territory, aka, into the probability range of what we usually think of when we say “assumptions”. If I am making a claim that some random car Y is within 100 meters from me in the middle of a parking lot, that is an assumption if I don’t see the car. However, not all assumptions carry equal weight. If Y is a car that is common that assumption carries more weight than if Y was a super rare sports car. And the more I know the more accurate assumptions I can make. If I know the neighborhood the parking lot is in is poor, then the probability of Y being a super rare sports car drops drastically. If there is a sports super car owner convention and I know they’re using that parking lot, then the probability increases. The more factors I am aware of the more accurately I can predict whether an assumption is likely to be true or false.

The word assumption itself thus implies realism and objectivism, because without that, it is impossible to determine what is an assumption, and what isn’t, and how valid an assumption is.

This is really some basic level shit though, and I’m not much willing to argue about most of it.

Magnus Anderson,

No, again, whether something exists or not is NOT dependent on being observed. Rather, humans can only observe things which exist. So everything we observe exists (if we are indeed observing it instead of being mad and imagining that we are observing things), but not everything that exists is necessarily observed. Some things may exist but we may not observe them because they are not in the physical proximity of our senses, or our senses simply aren’t focused upon them. Ideas exist within reality, but only within a particular segment of reality - minds. Outside of minds, ideas don’t exist. And things don’t exist “in forms of ideas”, that is very poor wording. Instead, ideas OF some things exist, but the form of an idea of a thing, and the form of a thing itself, are different.

Anyway, since I haven’t received the kind of criticism I hoped for, I had to come up with criticisms of my own thread myself.

Mainly, I am still uncertain to what extent the dots between “is” and “ought” can really be connected. I tried to use the First Foundational objective (survival) as that which would connect the dots for all living beings, but a video by TFM made me think.

TFM says in this video (youtube.com/watch?v=Fw-HZu2jqdg) that survival in the sense of what I call long-term survival (genetic propagation) is irrelevant because we don’t, really, survive to any relevant extent, as our genes become extremely diluted only after a few generations. He didn’t mention the specific numbers himself, but since parents pass on approximately 50% of genes to their child, already by the 2nd generation only half of you survives. The 3rd generation, 25%. By the tenth generation, which is only about 200-300 years, the percentage of you which survives is reduced to below 1%. And ultimately none of that matters and it will be reduced to 0% because scientists predict that just as the Big Bang happened, there will be an opposite, a Big Crunch. So whereas Big Bang was an expansion of a singularity into a universe, a big crunch would be the universe contracting back into a singularity, and erasing all life. If that doesn’t exterminate us humans, something like the explosion of the sun, or shortage of water and food, or pollution, or nuclear war or some other thing will.

So the question then becomes - Do you really have a reason to give a shit about reproducing your genes and caring about the evolutionary process, when the evolutionary process itself will eventually be extinguished when all life on earth goes extinct. It becomes more personal - what do you want? Is it worth it to give up a portion of your life to make and possibly care for offspring, or not?

Perhaps to somebody it is indeed worth it. Perhaps somebody so enjoys taking drugs that they consider the high pleasurable enough to risk their life for it. Of course, if their life is centered around that and so they don’t propagate their genes, evolution will just filter them out, because like they don’t care about evolutionary processes, evolutionary processes don’t care about them. If taking drugs is truly what they wanted and truly what made them happy, then it might have been all worth it, for them. If somebody is ugly, or stupid, or has some other deficiency which prevents them from actually accomplishing things in life, they may subconsciously realize that inebriating themselves to temporarily forget their own inferiority is the only way they can be happy, even for a little while. That inebriation can also take the form of flattering ideologies which tell them they are valuable, and beautiful, and not worse than anybody else… that they are equal to all others.

A perhaps shorter and clearer version - though some action, like drinking a beverage mixed with a deadly poison, may be in direct conflict with the first objective of survival, and thus in the long-term, with itself, since drinking such a beverage once will make it impossible for you to do it ever again since you will be dead, it is still possible that to the subject, despite of all that, IT IS STILL WORTH IT in terms of cost/benefit to drink it because the taste is just so good that it is worth dying for. It doesn’t mean the subject escaped the consequences of their actions, or the filtering (evolutionary) process of the objective world. It means that the subject accepted the consequences and costs.

The same logic applies to small poisons. Somebody may like cigarettes so much that they are willing to shorten their lifespan by smoking cigarettes for the pleasure of smoking, knowing that it will take away time of their life they could have used to do other things.

Ultimately the only judge of what we ought to do (how to accomplish happiness) are ourselves. So the only way to do it is to know ourselves - what we need and want in life. If we are unhappy it means we haven’t accomplished something which we think would make us happy, and/or we are dissatisfied with how we have previously used our time. If we haven’t done it, it is either because we couldn’t recognize what it is that would make us happy due to failing to know ourselves, or we did recognize it but didn’t have the ability to do it. Another option is that we might think something will make us happy, do it, then realize it doesn’t make us happy after all, and that we wasted our time. This is why knowing what we truly want, and what the limits of our abilities to get it are, is crucial.

Did I ever say that there is no existence beyond what humans sense? No. So why are you bringing it up?

I guess I need to make it explicit. What one senses is not necessarily everything there is to sense.

Organisms have a sensory capacity. There is only so much they can sense.

Now, since I made it clear that I never said that one’s field of view defines the totality of existence, it’s up to you show how my words appear to imply it.

What I said was this: existence is that which is sensed.

Where does that imply that what is sensed is all there is to sense?

Nowhere.

As he said, this is seems to be an issue of language use. What you said in the red, DOES say that existence is ONLY that which is sensed. Apparently you use English differently. You were correct when you said, “potential to be observed”. When you leave out that word “potential”, you directly imply that something must be observed in order for it to exist. That is just the way English works.

It comes down to this question: what is our immediate contact with existence? Is it our senses or is it our intellect?

Is existence sensory experience or is it an abstraction?

Do you really think that abstractions/intuitions are more real than facts/sensations?

In Myers-Briggs typology, I am a moderate S type whereas James is clearly an N type. This is why we think differently.

Neither. That is the whole point. It has nothing to do with us or our thoughts, period.

That is not at all “why”. That was merely an attempt to describe differences, not reasons/causes.

In the first place how did we arrive at the concept of ‘atoms’?
The existence of atoms are framed by a human-based Framework and System, i.e. the Scientific Framework and System.
Therefore the existence of atoms are grounded on the subjects collectively.

Do atoms really exist by themselves per-se?
No! atoms are merely clusters of sub-atomic particles some moving at great speed within a nucleus.
The existence of sub-atomic particles are framed by a human-based Framework and System, i.e. the Scientific Framework and System.
Therefore the existence of sub-atomic particles are grounded on the subjects collectively.

There is no way you can deny the above knowledge and its logic.

Thus no matter what the ultimate matter that is to be discovered by Science, it will be grounded on the subjects collectively, i.e. the human-based Scientific Framework and System!

Therefore there is no pre-existing objects, i.e. objects that exist as absolutely independent from the conditions of humans [subjects].

Now when objects and things emerged onto the consciousness of humans, they arise in alignment with certain pre-existing algorithms within the human brain most via Nature [DNA] and nurture [RNA].
This is why you see an apple which rots subsequently.
A bacteria or fungus do not ‘see’ such “an apple which rots subsequently” like ALL normal humans do.
Why? because a bacteria or fungus has different pre-existing inherent algorithms in their central nervous systems.
Is there something constant or permanent that all living things will cognize as the same universally? None!
Therefore whatever the reality, it is always subject[s]-interdependent.

Your urge to reify objects out there as you/&others want them to be is due to a terrible psychology and instinct within.

That is what Hume argued, i.e. the reality of cause and effect is pure psychology due to customs and habit of constant conjunction.
Hume did not understand “certain pre-existing algorithms within the human brain most via Nature [DNA] and nurture [RNA],” then.

Your thinking is too superficial and confined to conventional and one narrow perspective.
Note I mentioned emergence based on “certain pre-existing algorithms within the human brain most via Nature [DNA] and nurture [RNA],” and driven by psychology grounded on the survival instinct.

Apparently you have been brainwashed to fear evil ideological systems.
I am not into subjectivism nor any ‘ism.’
The most realistic fact is reality is grounded on the subject[s] interdependently and collectively.
All your fears of evil ideologies and ‘-isms’ including your own can be mitigated and modulated by a sound Framework and System of Morality and Ethics to ensure optimal well being for humanity. Many people focus too much on objects or subjects but forgot about Morality and Ethics.

Your sort of independent external objectivity is merely a shade nearer to the ontological objectivity of a God and from this view you lose contact and control of reality.

From the realistic of a collective-subjective reality which is driven by ‘subjects’ collectively, it open up the opportunity for subjects - in entanglement with the reality they are a part of -to control their destiny from a collective basis which is shared and gelled by Philosophy-proper. [Morality and Ethics being primary].

Philosophically the only way you can align your independent external reality is to rely on the Correspondence Theory of Truth without even knowing whether there a parallel reality on the other side.

Incorrect. They are merely named by humans. They do not physically exist because humans discovered them.

Incorrect.

Didn’t you just say that they do not exist? Yet here you describe what they are.

Equally incorrect, for the same reasons.

Naming or observing something does not constitute causing it to exist. It would be a bit difficult to observe it if it didn’t already exist.

Obviously also incorrect.

I suspect that your catch-all phrase is lacking clear definition and meaning.

I see the above views are too narrow and rigid.
It is a fact all normal humans has all the machinery and are driven to reproduce the next generations.
Thus the obvious inference is directed as preservation of the human species.
Re Hume, this inference cannot be final.
On a detailed analysis, the preservation of the species is not absolute as the human species evolved from many extinct species.

The preservation of the human species may not be true after 1 million years as human could evolve into new species after 5-10 millions year.

Nevertheless the following inferences from past reality are still useful to some degrees;

  1. Within a range of 1 millions years, the purpose of normal humans is the preservation of the human specie.
  2. Universally, the purpose of most living things [including human beings] is to reproduce the next generation.

For practical purposes humanity should adopt the above qualified theories to ground the various philosophical theories.
Because if we don’t then the human species could be extinct within the next 100 years or sooner given the potential WMDs we have on hand the more powerful ones in the future which an be easily available.

For example there is no such indication nor moral maxim to ensure the survival and preservation of the human species in the Quran and Muslims can kill with the slightest ambiguous conditions to defend the religion.
In addition, when Muslims die they are promised eternal life and martyrs are assured of an expeditious path to Paradise with virgins. The Quran also promote a preference for the hereafter rather than the lowly life on Earth.
Now without any maxim to ensure the preservation of the human species on Earth, a percentile of evil prone Muslims will have no hesitations to exterminate the human species when they get their had on cheap powerful WMDs because no matter what they are guaranteed eternal life in heaven.

Note ‘naming’ of things is so obvious. This is an irrelevant point.

We were discussing ‘emergence’ out of a human-based Framework and System, i.e. the Scientific Framework and System.

Things emerged out of the following;

  1. A pre-existing evolved algorithm embedded in the DNA.
  2. An algorithm shaped by the RNA
  3. The existence of atoms and sub-atomic particles emerging human-based Framework and System, i.e. the Scientific Framework and System.
  4. The existence of things emerging from various human-based Framework and System, i.e. Scientific and non-Scientific Framework and System.
  5. The existence of various selves and empirical selves emerging from various human-based Framework and System, i.e. Scientific and non-Scientific Framework and System.
  6. Others

Now whatever the object that emerge out of reality as external is an emergence as a resultant of the above conditions.

The discovery and naming follows from the above emergence of the object.

What you missed is ‘atoms do not exist-by-themselves-per-se.’
Atoms exist only by-their-Framework&System.
You need to understand the above two concepts which are different.
Note “exist-by-themselves” versus “exist-by-Subjective-Framework.”
I don’t think you will ever understand given the rigid straight-jacket you are wearing.

As implied above, this point is kindergarten stuff which need not be presented.
There is a deeper cognitive and reification process involved that is driven by terrible psychology as Hume alluded.

If you cannot see the 500 pound gorilla because of some psychological blinkers you will never understand [not agree with] my point.

Subatomic particles don’t have DNA.
DNA has subatomic particles.

Thus from there on down, your theory is irrelevant.

There is stuff intrinsically out there … stuff which is separate from our thoughts. Modern science say that it’s atoms but that’s a model … an approximation … of what really exists. All thoughts and all words are approximations. Nothing that you think is real. The only reality is outside of thought.

Are atoms a reasonable model of reality? Yes.
Further exploration and discovery will produce a different model - maybe a little different or very different.

A Unicorn in the Corner:

Unfortunately humanity arrived in an age where the vast majority participate in the “Big Lie”. They claim, and believe, there is a unicorn in the corner. This is a price and cost of civilization, a grandiose lie and delusion that people “pay into”, and is directly analogous to christianity and popular religions. Everybody “believes” in the unicorn although they cannot reproduce it nor provide evidence for it. To understand why and how this occurs, and so many begin “buying into” such a socially popular delusion, you first have to examine the foundation of these lies predicated on civilization. Civilization requires re-distribution of Authorities. Thus the majority of humans don’t have “their own” thoughts or beliefs about existence/objectivity/reality but instead must access existence through a proxy, an Authority, a representative of a specialization. For example, when people want to solve math equations or understand chemical reactions then they go to a mathematician and physicist. People trust on science for “facts”. People trust on religion for “morals”. Etc.

Because authority has been institutionalized (sociology), “common sense” becomes uncommon throughout humanity and civilization (autism). An average person doesn’t know anything about anything. She is ignorant and also claims innocence, blameless and stupid. In order for a person to have any respectability then that person must become “Initiated” into an established order (specialization). Like a pupil becomes a priest, a student becomes a professor, a scientist becomes an “expert”, etc. Indoctrination and sophistry results in specialized thinking that focuses on particular topics at the cost and exclusion of others. Therefore to answer a seemingly simple question, you are encouraged or forced to go to the appropriate representative authority of society and humanity, and receive direction from him. For example a person seeks out a police officer to solve a crime, a doctor to diagnose a disease, an airplane pilot to fly across the world, “god” to justify moral actions and sentiments, etc. In this way “common sense” becomes uncommon in that an average person can do very little about any single, specified topic of life, and must rely on an authority’s judgments and decrees.

The individual becomes helpless, mundane, boring, stupid, and completely “average”. This is the definition of “humanity”, completely incapable as individuals, but increasingly and exponentially collectivist and socialist.

The difference between the (subjective) ideas of the individual versus the collective society is that between mere ‘opinions’ and the established, indoctrinated ‘facts’ of representative authorities. A “scientist”, talking head politician on the television, a priest, a doctor, etc. all have more authority and therefore more access to the ‘facts’ of life (within civilization) than the common populace.

But then you go deeper into the madness. Here is an analogy. Let’s pretend for a moment that the entire human civilization is predicated on a simple proposition: There is a unicorn in the corner of this room. If this statement is true then so is human civilization, glory, and existence. And if it is false then so is humanity. So people are taught to believe in the preposition, indoctrinated over generations, not just one generation but several or dozens of hundreds. People have been believing in this lie (“truth”) for centuries and millenniums. Did you think you could just “change” it? Did you think you could just point it out, and others would agree with you? You would be naive. Because if you had the gall to point it out then others would interject and deny you, argue with you, and eventually fight you.

“How dare you question the unicorn in the corner?”
“What the fuck do you mean, you can’t see it? It’s right there! I see it! Are you calling me a liar?!”
“Wow this person is nuts, a complete whack job, cannot even see what is right in front of him…”
“Lock this lunatic up in the asylum, whacko!”

When you begin to go against the Big Lie then prepare for endless, useless, futile battles with everybody around you. Because that is the potential of this delusion. How does it perpetuate? The answer is simple. Children believe in anything, fairies, magic, demons, imps, invisible gods, etc. It’s easy to convince children of an imaginary (subjective) world in which their egos are separated and divorced from nature (hardship, reality, philosophy). And so children will most readily accept the (im)-possibility of the unicorn in the corner. “Oh yeah, I kind of see it…oh it moved! Wow I see it now, looks kind of blueish”. “No, it’s clearly purple.” “You’re right, it must be the lighting in here.”

Civilization operates on the preposition of the lie. To expose it, to refute it, to denounce it, is also to undermine the shared human lies which everybody intuitively understands are “Subjective”. Let’s imagine for a moment that a person from “outside humanity” were brought into the confines of humanity for a moment, and into the room. The outsider says to the group, “Where is this unicorn in the room? I can’t see it.” The humans say, “What…are you blind? It’s right there, pretty obvious…” The rest of the humans say to each other, “Yeah, haha, very obvious, it’s circling and neighing, everybody can see that.” The rest of the humans, “Yep, pretty obvious, lol.” The outsider is miffed and bewildered, confused. “Ummm, sorry guys, I still can’t see anything.” The humans: “Yep, you must be blind, there’s something wrong with this guy’s eyes, should have them checked out by a doctor.”

At this point, it maybe more worthwhile for the outsider to go along with the Big Lie than try to fight it. Because what does he have to gain, or to lose, from doing so? You may presume at this point that there is a great hierarchy and intelligence that goes into the Big Lie. There are some humans, at the top, who gain the most from the lie and perpetuate it. They know there is no unicorn, but, convince any doubter there is one there anyway. Any rebel or outlaw saying otherwise is shouted down quickly and ruthlessly. The kids intuit the whole ordeal as a game, at first. But later in life, as adults, they have given up on finding the truth of it. They don’t know, and frankly, don’t care whether the unicorn is there or not. But most humanity pretends and acts as if it were. And this can be dangerous.

And most obviously, this is ‘Subjective’.

So why is it not called subjectivism?

Objectivity is itself both objective and subjective, both impartial and biased. What is objective truth of our reality is biased to our reality and subjective in its preference as well as opinions thereof, said opinions being part of a subjective objective truth which any such would in itself be subjective to the overall objective subjective objective. This is being far more brief than is fair for the actual subject and that is objective, subjective and impartial biased truth that is considered opinion.

One can also use the follwoing wording: Not everything that exists is observable, but everything that is observable exists.

Most people do not think for the long term but merely for the short term.