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irreality

Irreality is a term used to describe the state or quality of not being real or lacking objective existence. In philosophy, it refers to debates about how things appear versus how they exist independently of perception. The term is often employed to discuss theoretical constructs, entities in thought experiments, or phenomena that are claimed to be unreal within a given framework. Irreality is not a single theory but a label that can indicate epistemic or ontological questions about the status of objects, properties, or events.

In psychology, irreality commonly enters discussions of derealization, a subjective experience in which the external world

In literature and the arts, irreality denotes a mode in which ordinary rules of time, space, and

Etymologically, irreality is formed from the prefix ir- plus reality. Related terms include illusion, unreality, nonreality,

Related topics include unreality, illusion, derealization, depersonalization, surrealism, magical realism, realism, and anti-realism.

seems
unfamiliar,
dreamlike,
or
unreal.
Derealization
can
occur
episodically
or
be
part
of
a
broader
dissociative
or
anxiety-related
condition,
and
may
be
accompanied
by
depersonalization,
emotional
numbing,
or
altered
perception
of
time
and
space.
Clinically,
persistent
or
distressing
symptoms
may
warrant
evaluation
for
a
derealization/depersonalization
disorder.
causality
are
suspended.
It
is
closely
associated
with
surrealism,
magical
realism,
dream
sequences,
and
other
devices
that
challenge
conventional
notions
of
reality
and
invite
interpretation
rather
than
empirical
verification.
fantasy,
hallucination,
and
skepticism
about
the
external
world.
Philosophical
discussions
of
irreality
often
intersect
with
realism,
anti-realism,
phenomenology,
and
idealism.