A Real Ideal Sense of Mind, Matter, and Self.
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A Real Ideal Sense of Mind, Matter, and Self Abstract The Realist / Idealist dichotomy attracted the writer to the following; we immediately find ourselves in the hard-nosed, clamorous, and antiquated trenches of this polemic. Significant proponents of the relevant camps provide the contextual background for our endeavor. The treatment as such brings fecund opportunity to develop phenomenalist perspective of the 'problems of philosophy' well enough to deconstruct their premises as being nonsensical. Phenomenal mind, matter, and self result and are oriented with the world in which we sense, know, and live: our Universe, one with no Other. The renowned Realist/Idealist dichotomy incited the following exploration, which began with Russell, "IS there any knowledge in the world which is so certain that no reasonable man could doubt it?" Of what do we have indubitable knowledge? This query, without even considering the products of its perusal, is worth exploring. Descartes spawned the...

