o knew that God did not change, if he would have thought that God was reality? Plato clings to the idea of “objectivity.” He identifies it as pertaining to the world of forms. He also believed that form resides in a separate world. Some forms that Plato feels that we can know are justice, beauty, truth, and love. I wonder if Plato thought that such forms were real? In observing such things, I would say that these things all change, so using Plato’s definition, they must not be reality. Richard Rhorty believes that there are two types of objectivity. First he deals with the concept that there is “a correspondence between what is out there and is supposedly discovered by an algorithm.” He does not feel that this is feasible because he says that there is no apparent way to perform such a task. Rhorty would not agree with the ideals that I hold this can be seen from his second point; the notion of objectivity involves such things that are adopted by a consensus or coherent and rational individuals. This is in contrast to that which I hold true. I feel that even though everyone does not agree that God is reality that it does not mean that he is not. All absolutes are a part of everything: God is everything. This is the branch that my personal philosophy of rests upon. ...