There is no objective standard for determining what is part of nature, but nearly everyone has
strong subjective feelings about what is nature and what by implication is unnatural.
Not exact matches
He acknowledges that
feelings are
subjective and that when we experience
strong feelings, our perceptions of reality can be distorted.
Here once again there is a remarkable similarity between certain emphases in Whitehead as well as in other process - thinkers and the
strong insistence of contemporary existentialism on the centrality of the «
subjective»
feelings and of self - awareness in human experience.
A demand simply for freedom to act upon
subjective religious
feelings is a claim (though not a
strong one) that can easily be seen to validate a relativist worldview.
Whitehead's exceedingly
strong distinctions between
subjective and objective dimensions of the transmission of
feelings, and the final and efficient causality therein involved, fall into the category of this infection of thought by modes of discrimination between individually conceivable things or elements of things.66