The methodologies that you are binding yourself with are precisely the limitations I am referring to. If you always need a methodology to observe and understand the world....it automatically imposes a severe limitation on you.
Without a methodology, though, you're just throwing out innumerable equally invalid claims.
You are living.... and living itself is an experience and a source of information. The 'objective reality' stuff that we have gotten obsessed with has only limited applicability. Life and death are still subjective. So are Mind and Consciousness....as also the Self. Most life experiences are subjective.
Right, but what are they subjective experiences of? Whilst some subjective experiences are all well and good (and some aren't), it's difficult to determine how to improve them in a reliable fashion if you just settle for subjectivity.
What we refer to as 'objective reality' is just the framework within which we exist. By understanding that we don't understand ourselves. We still remain external observers to all reality.
How do you know, unless you examine it. Without a methodology to determine if your subjective claim (or, at least, my subjective experience of reading what I think is your subjective claim) how do we actually know if we're external observers to reality, or simply complex parts of a more complex universe struggling to organise itself against ongoing entropy?
So...what is it that observes? What is the subject?
Why ask the question if you're happy with your subjective determination that we're external?
It is only through introspection and an understanding of our mind that we begin to understand ourselves.
Perhaps - certainly I'm inclined to agree with you - all we're differing on is how we understand that mind. You're looking for introspection, I'm looking to neurology, information theory and biochemistry.
And it is incorrect to just brush of the subjective reality as imaginary or delusional.....something the brain does.
Does it? My subjective experience is that my subjective experience is, at best, questionable - that's probably just something my brain does from it's subjective understanding, right?
The subjective aspects of reality often meet the objective world. These effects can be observed and even perhaps documented. But to accept them as genuine effects of a real phenomenon, we need to develop appropriate methodologies and systems that can do the job.
But for this to happen, we need to take subjective experiences seriously and as part of the reality of this world. This is what is missing.
I'm not sure where it is that you think we're ignoring our experiences; what we're not doing is accepting all of them uncritically, that's a different thing.
For example, if we all are born blind and only one person can see Light, would it be an objective reality or merely a subjective experience of one person?!
It would be an objective reality that would be demonstrable with scientific equipment - much as, say, radio waves and gamma rays are. We're all blind to them, but we can practically demonstrate them, derive predictions from our understanding, and then validate those predictions. We might still have an imperfect understanding, but we've demonstrated that we've an imperfect understanding of something that's actually there, because it has effects.
O.