The invention of reality
Loading...
Files
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The subject of the article is the process of forming ideas about the world as reality, which
is most accurately described by the word “invention”. The author, relying on classical texts
in this respect (E. Husserl, M. Heidegger) and modern studies (A. Makushinsky, J.-F. Kurtin)
substantiates the position according to which the idea of reality is not a cultural invariant. The
notion that reality has always existed, and thanks to scientific reason has been most adequately
reflected, understood and described, is a significant modernization. This has been evidenced
by both the etymology of the concepts of “reality” and “reality”, which first appeared only in
scholasticism (D. Scotus, M. Eckhart), and the process of their content filling, which is inextricably
linked with the formation of scientific rationality. The article shows that both the scientific
mind and the integral image of the world created by it, which we call reality, genetically
date back to the Christian value-semantic universe. Initially, it was within the framework of
the discourse of natural theology that the image of the autonomous world has been conceptualized,
developing according to the universal principles established by God. In the first scientific
programs (R. Descartes, G. Galilei, I. Newton), these ideas were continued, as a result of
which the world began to be understood as an immanent reality that is subject to the laws of
nature. The new ontological beliefs received the ultimate philosophical foundation in the philosophy
of Immanuel Kant, to whom the phenomenal world exhausts the reality available to
man. Accordingly, the world turns into a one-dimensional detranscendentalized reality. This
methodological approach allows the author to make the following conclusions: 1) the image of
world “reality” is a rather modern “invention”, which was unknown in previous eras; 2) at the
same time, it is genetically connected with the Christian semantic universe, outside of which
it could not appear; 3) the world in it is understood as a one-dimensional immanent reality.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Levytskyy V. S. The invention of reality. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Philosophy and Conflict Studies, 2021, vol. 37, issue 3, pp. 428–440.