Noson,
Welcome back.
Your essay was of great interest to me and prompted a number of questions along the way. The exclusive use of the "object" terminology calls to mind the great number of terms we use for things that we observe and are vague meaning and use: particles, matter, atoms, objects, molecules, etc.
Sean Carroll, for one, says that every particle is a field and, for example, an electron is an excitation of an electron field. I reference a study where researchers used the elements ytterbium, rhodium and silicon to create a type of metal in which the electrons act as a unit and not independently as they do in a regular metal like copper that seems to bridge the quantum and classical worlds. I know some believe that particles are real and most don't. I wonder how you define an object and what you think of the element study above.
You say, "All large-scale objects are created by us and we idealize them to make them applicable to the laws." In another passage you say, "It is a human mind that makes them into a whole." I agree that flaws mark our search for ultimate truths and that our theories are tentative and that we try to make our objects applicable to our theories and concepts. I can see that Kant has influenced current philosophy with his ideas on synthesis and transcendental deduction but I'm not too schooled on his thinking.
No one has a corner on the makeup of our physical universe. I think we are all searching. Hope you get a chance to read mine.
Jim Hoover