Explain = “to make plain or understandable” (Webster’s 2014); to present some subject of interest so that it fits within the prevailing paradigm (wall of bricks) Access = “freedom or ability to obtain or make use of something” (Webster’s 2014); achieving the freedom to be used by Epistemological = “the study or theory of the nature, sources, and limits of knowledge” (Webster’s 1998) Epistemic = “of or relating to knowledge or knowing” (Webster’s 2014) Ontology = the science of being (or existence) Ontological = “relating to or based upon being or existence” (Webster’s 2014)
Mind = a) that which thinks, perceives, feels, wills, etc.; seat or subject of consciousness b) the thinking and perceiving part of consciousness; intellect or intelligence c) attention; notice d) all of an individual's conscious experiences e) the conscious and the unconscious together as a unit; psyche Objective = “being, or regarded as being, independent of the mind, real, actual” (Webster’s 1998); formally that which has third person verification; almost universally accepted as what is actually real Subjective = “of, or affected by or produced by the mind ... of or resulting from the feelings or temperament of the subject or person thinking; not objective” (Webster’s 1998); formally something believed or claimed that lacks third person verification; by virtue of taking what is objective as reality, by default subjective is that which is unreal
Epistemological Objectivity = epistemological reality; reality as agreement Epistemological Subjectivity = epistemological unreality Ontological Objectivity = that which exists without the need for awareness (consciousness) Ontological Subjectivity = ontological reality Social Reality = e.g., money, marriage, basketball; a linguistic agreement-based reality, reality by practices