Like the jellyfish you're about to meet in this post, I'm probably out of my depth but I won't let that deter me:
One mathematician argues that if four dinosaurs stand together in a prehistoric clearing, they number four even though no people are there to count them. In other words, numbers exist independent of human beings. But consider the counterexample (suggested by British mathematician Sir Michael Atiyah) that starts with the imaginary idea that intelligence resides not in people but in a "vast solitary and isolated jellyfish, buried deep in the depths of the Pacific Ocean" with "no experience of individual objects, only with the surrounding water." In this thought experiment, argues Atiyah, "there would be nothing to count." It follows from this second example that numbers - and all math - arise from the way that humans perceive the world.
Hmmm... In the world of the jellyfish, and whether the jellyfish knows this or not, there is a jellyfish and there is an ocean. The jellyfish is distinct from the ocean and vice versa. Jellyfish. Ocean. An objectively-existing basis for the number 2. (Via.)