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Posted: Wed Feb 11, 2026 1:32 pm
Then I also start Googling information, inquiring about why imagination
is considered unreality. I’m simply interested in how, let’s say, this social
world with its limited boundaries and frames — how it defends itself to
create these borders, so that all this magical stuff doesn’t leak through, and
so that this whole world we live in is not magical. And here is what they write:
“Reality is that which exists objectively, independently of our consciousness,
and is subject to verification through observation, measurement, and the
experience of other people. For example, the table your computer stands
on physically exists, you can touch it, measure it, and other people can
also confirm its presence. But imagination is a product of the work of our
consciousness, creating an image, images, ideas, or scenarios that do not
have physical embodiment at the moment. A child’s imaginary friend exists
only in their consciousness and cannot be perceived objectively by others.”
This is correct, it’s logical, that if you see an imaginary friend, or, for example,
you imagined that a unicorn is in front of you, then if other people cannot
confirm it, it means it’s just your illusion in your head. But then again, we
also live in an illusion, it just has a material density, but essentially, both
sleep and the dreams we dream — our brain creates that too, it creates all
these virtual training rooms in which we experience something, pass through
something. But the reality in which we live, this is also our imagination, it
just has certain boundaries, linear time, plus it’s also connected with all other
people, that is, it’s a bit more, let’s say, complexly arranged. But nonetheless,
it’s also imagination, that is, it’s a projection of our brains, or more accurately,
the brains — they are already projected, that is, we don’t even have brains.
The way we are used to seeing ourselves, feeling ourselves, and the same
way people see us, it is precisely, let’s say, “making it up,” let’s call it that.
That is, we thought this up, but we cannot free ourselves from it. Time
flows, and we know that we are aging, and people want to see with their own
eyes that you are aging in their eyes. You are a part of their projection, plus
you also live in your own projection, which you project for yourself with
these people. There is this kind of, let’s say, interconnection and influence
on each other. And as they also show in the movie The Matrix, when he
supposedly came out of the “Matrix,” he still sees himself as the same.
Or rather, when he got in, when he switched to a simulation with Morpheus,
is considered unreality. I’m simply interested in how, let’s say, this social
world with its limited boundaries and frames — how it defends itself to
create these borders, so that all this magical stuff doesn’t leak through, and
so that this whole world we live in is not magical. And here is what they write:
“Reality is that which exists objectively, independently of our consciousness,
and is subject to verification through observation, measurement, and the
experience of other people. For example, the table your computer stands
on physically exists, you can touch it, measure it, and other people can
also confirm its presence. But imagination is a product of the work of our
consciousness, creating an image, images, ideas, or scenarios that do not
have physical embodiment at the moment. A child’s imaginary friend exists
only in their consciousness and cannot be perceived objectively by others.”
This is correct, it’s logical, that if you see an imaginary friend, or, for example,
you imagined that a unicorn is in front of you, then if other people cannot
confirm it, it means it’s just your illusion in your head. But then again, we
also live in an illusion, it just has a material density, but essentially, both
sleep and the dreams we dream — our brain creates that too, it creates all
these virtual training rooms in which we experience something, pass through
something. But the reality in which we live, this is also our imagination, it
just has certain boundaries, linear time, plus it’s also connected with all other
people, that is, it’s a bit more, let’s say, complexly arranged. But nonetheless,
it’s also imagination, that is, it’s a projection of our brains, or more accurately,
the brains — they are already projected, that is, we don’t even have brains.
The way we are used to seeing ourselves, feeling ourselves, and the same
way people see us, it is precisely, let’s say, “making it up,” let’s call it that.
That is, we thought this up, but we cannot free ourselves from it. Time
flows, and we know that we are aging, and people want to see with their own
eyes that you are aging in their eyes. You are a part of their projection, plus
you also live in your own projection, which you project for yourself with
these people. There is this kind of, let’s say, interconnection and influence
on each other. And as they also show in the movie The Matrix, when he
supposedly came out of the “Matrix,” he still sees himself as the same.
Or rather, when he got in, when he switched to a simulation with Morpheus,