Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Subjective idealism
(section)
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
==Overview==<!-- all except criticism section, which was cut from [[Idealism]]'s section on S.I. , which has not received reports of lack of citation --> Subjective idealism is a fusion of [[phenomenalism]] or empiricism, which confers special status upon the immediately perceived, with [[idealism]], which confers special status upon the mental. Idealism denies the knowability or existence of the non-mental, while phenomenalism serves to restrict the mental to the empirical. Subjective idealism thus identifies its mental reality with the world of ordinary experience, and does not comment on whether this reality is "divine" in some way as [[pantheism]] does, nor comment on whether this reality is a fundamentally unified whole as does [[absolute idealism]]. This form of idealism is "subjective" not because it denies that there is an objective reality, but because it asserts that this reality is completely dependent upon the minds of the subjects that perceive it. The earliest thinkers identifiable as subjective idealists were certain members of the [[Yogācāra]] school of Indian Buddhism, who reduced the world of experience to a stream of subjective perceptions. Subjective idealism made its mark in Europe in the 18th-century writings of [[George Berkeley]], who argued that the idea of mind-independent reality is incoherent, concluding that the world consists of the minds of humans and of God. Subsequent writers have continuously grappled with Berkeley's [[skepticism|skeptical]] arguments. [[Immanuel Kant]] responded by rejecting Berkeley's immaterialism and replacing it with [[transcendental idealism]], which views the mind-independent world as existent but incognizable [[noumenon|in itself]]. Since Kant, true immaterialism has remained a rarity, but is survived by partly overlapping movements such as phenomenalism, subjectivism, and [[perspectivism]]. [[Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel|Hegel]] rejected Kant's immaterialism, demeaning it to a "reduction of the facts of consciousness to a purely personal world."<ref>{{Cite web |last=Sedgwick |first=Sally S. |date=1988 |title=Hegel's Critique of the Subjective Idealism of Kant's Ethics |url=http://faculty.www.umb.edu/steven.levine/Courses/Hegel/sedgwick.pdf |access-date=2025-01-15 |website=Umb.edu}}</ref>
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)