What Worldview Does Realism Hold
“Reality, in the eyes of Realism, is not a shadow of thought — it is the anchor that thought returns to.”
— Ersan Karavelioğlu
Metaphysical Foundation: Reality Exists Independently of the Mind
This is its ontological core:
Things are not because we think them — they are, and we come to know them.
- Trees exist whether or not we see them
- Truth is discovered, not created
- The universe has structure and law independent of human consciousness
Epistemology: Truth Is Out There — And Knowable
What we know about the world is imperfect, but not entirely subjective or illusory.
Science, reason, and experience can approximate truth — though never exhaust it.
- There is a correspondence between belief and fact
- Truth = what is, not what feels right
- Perception is a tool, not the whole territory
Existential Implications: Responsibility Rooted in What Is
This has moral weight:
If reality is real, then actions have consequences, and choices ripple outward into a tangible world.
Instead, Realism invites us to:
- Face what is
- Work within natural and social constraints
- Build meaning not by inventing the world, but by engaging with it
It denies neither mystery nor meaning — but insists that such things must be rooted in the soil of what exists.
Conclusion: Realism Is a Worldview That Grounds, Not Limits
Realism does not dim imagination — it challenges it to meet the world on solid terms.
It teaches that truth may be veiled, but it is there — waiting to be revealed, not rewritten.
“Realism is not coldness — it is the warmth of knowing that we live in a world that responds, resists, and remembers.”
— Ersan Karavelioğlu
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