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Re: What do we replace religion with?
Reality is a concept. You can't compare its definition with, say, the definition of a table.
How fortunate you are to have a vocabulary so extensive that you're familiar with every word you read. When I read a word I don't ordinarily use such as, oh, "recondite," I look it up. In fact, because I value precision in language, I check Dictionary.com for one reason or another maybe five-ten times a day.
I should point out here that the link you provided is not to the OED; it's to the Oxford Living Dictionaries. Unless you have a (pricey) subscription, the only way you can access the OED is through a university library. What's great about the OED is that it provides information on the birth/first use and transformations of words. To give you an idea of the difference between the OED and its publicly available little siblings, I once here at DP needed to look up the definition of "baby" and pasted the entire definition into Word. It was 96 pages long.
Here, these dictionaries agree with each other, but I included this to show the problem with both conflicting definitions of the word fact. They both speak of "the state of things as they actually exist"... The problem, as I mentioned earlier, is that this 'actuality' differs from individual to individual similar to how a fingerprint does... Reality is not "the state of things as they actually exist", since that differs for everybody, but rather, reality (the same for everybody) is "one's own personal model of the universe and how it works". This definition is offered by philosophy, specifically the branch of phenomenology.
I'm not just "being obtuse" in my rejection of dictionary definitions as 'authoritative'... There are major issues with them, and they cloud people's understanding of philosophy, logic, religion, science, etc. etc...
Notice how the definitions I have offered aren't in any dictionary? They came from philosophy... Definitions can also come from things such as Logic, Science, Engineering, etc... They never come from an inanimate object such as a dictionary... Dictionaries can't reason...
...It is. Dictionaries are a collection of words. Those words get standardized in spelling and pronunciation. I've never appealed to a dictionary to define a word for me... I've looked to see how words are spelled and pronounced, however...
Reality is a concept. You can't compare its definition with, say, the definition of a table.
How fortunate you are to have a vocabulary so extensive that you're familiar with every word you read. When I read a word I don't ordinarily use such as, oh, "recondite," I look it up. In fact, because I value precision in language, I check Dictionary.com for one reason or another maybe five-ten times a day.
I should point out here that the link you provided is not to the OED; it's to the Oxford Living Dictionaries. Unless you have a (pricey) subscription, the only way you can access the OED is through a university library. What's great about the OED is that it provides information on the birth/first use and transformations of words. To give you an idea of the difference between the OED and its publicly available little siblings, I once here at DP needed to look up the definition of "baby" and pasted the entire definition into Word. It was 96 pages long.