Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

George Orwell, objectivity, and the reality behind illusions

View through CrossRef
Illusions are commonly defined as departures of our percepts from the veridical representation of objective, common-sense reality. However, it has been claimed recently that this definition lacks validity, for example, on the grounds that external reality cannot possibly be represented truly by our sensory systems, and indeed may even be a fiction. Here, I first demonstrate how novelist George Orwell warned that such denials of objective reality are dangerous mistakes, in that they can lead to the suppression and even the atrophy of independent thought and critical evaluation. Second, anti-realists assume their opponents hold a fully reductionist metaphysics, in which fundamental physics describes the only ground truth, thereby placing it beyond direct human sensory observation. In contrast, I point to a more recent and commonly used alternative, non-reductive metaphysics. This ascribes real existence to many levels of dynamic systems of information, emerging progressively from the subatomic to the biological, psychological, social, and ecological. Within such a worldview the notion of objective reality is valid, it comes in part within the range of our senses, and thus a definition of illusions as kinds of deviations from veridical perception becomes possible again.
SAGE Publications
Title: George Orwell, objectivity, and the reality behind illusions
Description:
Illusions are commonly defined as departures of our percepts from the veridical representation of objective, common-sense reality.
However, it has been claimed recently that this definition lacks validity, for example, on the grounds that external reality cannot possibly be represented truly by our sensory systems, and indeed may even be a fiction.
Here, I first demonstrate how novelist George Orwell warned that such denials of objective reality are dangerous mistakes, in that they can lead to the suppression and even the atrophy of independent thought and critical evaluation.
Second, anti-realists assume their opponents hold a fully reductionist metaphysics, in which fundamental physics describes the only ground truth, thereby placing it beyond direct human sensory observation.
In contrast, I point to a more recent and commonly used alternative, non-reductive metaphysics.
This ascribes real existence to many levels of dynamic systems of information, emerging progressively from the subatomic to the biological, psychological, social, and ecological.
Within such a worldview the notion of objective reality is valid, it comes in part within the range of our senses, and thus a definition of illusions as kinds of deviations from veridical perception becomes possible again.

Related Results

Orwell and George Gissing
Orwell and George Gissing
Abstract The Victorian novelist who meant the most to Orwell and who left the most profound impression on his own work was George Gissing. ‘Perhaps the best novelist...
Orwell and Bertrand Russell
Orwell and Bertrand Russell
Abstract Two of the great Englishmen of the twentieth century, George Orwell and Bertrand Russell, were mutual admirers and sympathetic collaborators. That Orwell wa...
Orwell and Modernism
Orwell and Modernism
Abstract To consider how Orwell himself perceived, evaluated, and was influenced by those ‘highbrow’ writers who epitomized formal experimentalism in his lifetime, a...
Orwell and Charles Dickens
Orwell and Charles Dickens
Abstract This chapter, a consideration of Dickens’s literary importance to Orwell, falls into four parts. The first considers some biographical evidence of Orwell’s ...
Orwell and Wyndham Lewis
Orwell and Wyndham Lewis
Abstract This chapter explores the unexpected relationship between Wyndham Lewis and Orwell, who recognized in 1939 that Lewis had moved politically to the left. Str...
Orwell and Stupidity
Orwell and Stupidity
Abstract Orwell used the term ‘stupidity’, and closely associated concepts such as ‘foolishness’ and ‘ignorance’, throughout his essays and novels as an idiosyncrati...
Orwell and Feminism
Orwell and Feminism
Abstract The story of Orwell’s relationship with feminism reveals ties that are as strong, persistent, and productive as any he forged with other political movements...
Comparing cybersickness in virtual reality and mixed reality head-mounted displays
Comparing cybersickness in virtual reality and mixed reality head-mounted displays
Introduction: Defence Research and Development Canada is developing guidance on the use of Mixed Reality head-mounted displays for naval operations in the Royal Canadian Navy. Virt...

Back to Top