I might also say: "I eat therefore I am" or "I sneeze therefore I am" or "I walk therefore I am". — Ken Edwards
A statement can be certain and false, and uncertain and true. — creativesoul
Witt spends a lot of time showing how learning a concept is being able to continue a series.. even into new contexts. — Antony Nickles
People generally aren’t drawn to that picture, your “concepts" being thought (then?) turned into words”. They haven’t a clue that’s what happening, because it’s all theory. Could be no one does that. So why diagnose a reason for something that is no more than speculative theoretic?
— Mww
This is complicated (it took the whole PI to draw it out), but the idea is that humans have a desire for certainty, and a fear of our human frailty (failings), and philosophers slide from there into radical skepticism, which, along with our ability to understand words without context, allows for a theoretical philosophical picture of how (all) language works, which skips over our human frailty and separateness. — Antony Nickles
The point being that a "concept" for Witt is not like an "idea" of something, or, say, conceptual--just language. — Antony Nickles
By showing how public meaning and language are......what?
— Mww
How much language and our concepts are public (rather than determined by me); that they are meaningful to (all of) us in the ways our lives are attuned "in judgments" Witt will say (not only in definitions of words). #242. — Antony Nickles
All I can put out there is that I think OLP's early intent on accounting for the desire for the picture of language as something internal (meaning, thought, intention, "mental activity" Witt will say) attached to or corresponding to a word or object, lessens its interest in anything else "mental". — Antony Nickles
off the top of my head: we don't "follow" Grammar, as we do rules; — Antony Nickles
I'll let the formulation of Grammar as "rules" go for now, and say I agree that Grammar has been established beforehand (as part of learning and joining society), though "completely" is also a bit far, as seeing that "we are responsible for" "the saying" does play an extra part because, once said/done, we are bound to our expressing, acting, "responsible for" having said it, for answering why, how, among all the possibilities and among what part of the context is important, we said this now, here--we are called out by it, seen in it. — Antony Nickles
And to which the question regarding images becomes its most relevant.
— Mww
And here I think I can say that if the idea that I am guessing as the answer to the riddle.... — Antony Nickles
I would say Witt is trying to diagnose the reason people are drawn to that picture by showing how public "meaning" and language are, and how "understanding" is relational (see comments above) at a point where knowledge reaches its limits. — Antony Nickles
Witt and Austin's goal is that our lives ([all] our judgements, distinctions, interests, in this language-game) are attuned to these words (concepts**), not that words "arise" from "concepts" (as in "ideas" I would guess) which are thought (casually, or otherwise). — Antony Nickles
Witt's idea of "concepts"** (completely different) is a grouping of regular and complex parts of our lives (language games) like justice, meaning, understanding, but also, forgiving, threatening, sitting in a chair, pointing, learning a series, seeing, seeing an aspect, and that each of these have their own Grammar (roughly, ways they work, as they are part of our lives) — Antony Nickles
Question: are images part and parcel of human mentality?
— Mww
Well this sounds like a loaded question......
Yeah...no. No more loaded than the title of the article, must we mean what we say. No, it is not necessarily the case that we must mean what we say, and, yes, images are part and parcel of human mentality or no they are not.
......what is "mentality"? Are we saying imagination? Or just the ability to bring up an image?....
Mentality is whatever you think it is, and from which whether images are part and parcel of it, is then determinable. We are not saying imagination, because we already said mentality. If it was the ability to bring up images, then they are presupposed and the question remains as to their part and parcel.
.......but I'd need more I think. — Antony Nickles
That's all you took from that essay? — Antony Nickles
as completely opposed to Mww's proposed definition of "principle" as an absolute truth) — Metaphysician Undercover
And seeing as how the physical arrangement cannot be changed.....what arrangement is left that can, and still conform to observation of the physical arrangement? — Mww
If the objects stayed the same, that does not mean the structure stayed the same, unless the structure is the object, but the structure is what changed. — Metaphysician Undercover
But to say that the sun goes around the earth every day, is simply wrong. — Metaphysician Undercover
What form does a principle have if not a propositional form? — Metaphysician Undercover
What a 2 represents in a particular instances of use is the symbol's meaning in that instance. — Metaphysician Undercover
That Copernicus knew the geocentric system, is clearly not the cause of him developing the heliocentric system, because millions of people already knew it as well. — Metaphysician Undercover
But clearly the old conceptual structure was rejected, lock stock and barrel, and replaced by the new. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is a problem epistemologists have, how can knowledge be wrong. If it's wrong, it can't be knowledge. — Metaphysician Undercover
And it really doesn’t change or help anything, to call uncertainty a flaw, even if in the strictest possible technical sense, it is.
— Mww
When we're talking about knowledge, clearly uncertainty is a flaw. — Metaphysician Undercover
If we thought up the so-called a priori principles, and we are sentient beings, then how could these principles be free from the influence of sense experience, to be truly a priori? — Metaphysician Undercover
So scientists focus on their capacity for making predictions rather than trying to find the true nature of things. — Metaphysician Undercover
how you would differentiate between a principle and a premise. — Metaphysician Undercover
The "logical structure of perception" is what I am arguing against. I think it's nonsense to say that perception uses logic. — Metaphysician Undercover
Kant’s aesthetics structures the capacity for what we feel to interact with our faculties of imagination and understanding without interference from judgement. — Possibility
Of course we cannot examine the coming into being of knowledge without knowledge having already come into being, but how is that point relevant to anything? — Metaphysician Undercover
the reality that, e.g., heliocentrism could never have come to be known, if the standing knowledge represented by geocentrism wasn’t being first examined by Aristarchus. Just because Ptolemy turned out to be wrong doesn’t take away from his knowledge.
— Mww
You have no logical association here. — Metaphysician Undercover
so we cannot logically say that the existence of heliocentrism is dependent on the prior existence of geocentricism. — Metaphysician Undercover
in many cases principles are built on existing principles. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since we cannot account for those fundamental principles, then all of our knowledge of knowledge is fundamentally flawed. — Metaphysician Undercover
If we cannot account for the fundamental principles, that's no problem, we just posit a priori principles and there you have it, problem solved. — Metaphysician Undercover
But now you are rejecting that assumption, saying that there might not even be such a thing as knowledge. I don't think you can have it both ways. That would just lead to ambiguous meaninglessness. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is what I think is fundamental to knowledge. We start with premises which prove very useful, and since they are so useful they seem solid to support structures of knowledge......
Yes, agreed.
.....An important thing to remember here, is that the principles at the base of the structure have been around for the longest.
Ditto.
.....they are actually the weakest ones, having been put into use the longest time ago when the state of knowledge was most primitive. — Metaphysician Undercover
if I am a Cartesian philosopher, I can (....) still not recognize ‘language game’ or ‘picture theory ‘ any differently than Mmw (...) after many exchanges with you. That is, such notions will be forced into what my Cartesian pre-conceptions impose on them. — Joshs
in the philosophical examination of how knowledge is acquired, something must already known.
— Mww
I disagree with all of this, at a most fundamental level. (W)e cannot philosophically examine the acquisition of knowledge with the presupposition that something must already be known, for the acquisition of knowledge, because this is contrary to the observed evidence of empirical science. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since we cannot characterize knowledge as relying on something already known, we cannot characterize it as the type of thing which continually builds upon an existing foundation. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't see how a rule is an identity. It might be a principle that a person would use in an effort to identify something, but that does not make the rule itself an identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you really believe that when a child is learning to call a dog a dog, it goes through a synthesis/reduction process of possible properties — Metaphysician Undercover
You neglected the influence of social relevance. — Metaphysician Undercover
One cannot make a valid deductive argument which relies on premises which are not stated, or "behind the scenes". — Metaphysician Undercover
So there is no "cognitive system" happening all the time — Antony Nickles
I stand ready to help in understanding if that is of any interest. — Antony Nickles
Pain as such, pain simplciter (...) is not a contingent "bad" but an absolute. — Constance
I defend a rather impossible thesis: within the self there is the oddest thing imaginable, which is value. — Constance
the synthesis of a plurality of phenomena under a general rule is called inductive reasoning, it's not identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
What is at issue is how does he know that they are the same kind of thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't see how the principle of non-contradiction is relevant, because he can see that the two things, have contradictory properties (different colour, or different size, for example), yet he still calls them by the same name, "dog". — Metaphysician Undercover
In Aristotelian logic these are accidental properties. — Metaphysician Undercover
What is going on behind the scenes remains as unknown, and that's why we have so much difficulty agreeing on metaphysical principles. — Metaphysician Undercover
And it seems strange to me you would reserve reason to humans. — tim wood
Do you say that dogs, e.g., are incapable of reason or capable of reason (near as you can tell)? — tim wood
Are you prepared to say we're the only beings in the universe able to reason? — tim wood
given gross circularity, that which is derived from it cannot be any more certain then the circularity itself permits.
— Mww
Consider what you consider certain. That certainty must be subject to the same critique, Does that suddenly make you feel less certain? — tim wood
It follows that the question is necessarily predicated on a misunderstanding.
— Mww
the question is, why isn't noumena dismissible as dialectic overreach, as delusion, with "the mere
dream of an extension of the pure understanding"? — Constance
the "it" so readily referred to — Constance
One way to say this is to yield to delimitation of the understanding, but in doing so admit there is an incompleteness, in metaethics, and in a full disclosure of world ontology — Constance
The person would only be using the principle of identity if the two different dogs were seen as the same dog. — Metaphysician Undercover
And since the person knows that the two different thing which are called by the name "dog" are not the same thing, the principle of non-contradiction is not even relevant. The two different dogs might have contradicting properties. — Metaphysician Undercover
My position is that there is no reason to assume that what is going on behind the scenes is a matter of applying criteria. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think not,
— Mww
And might well you think, but why (exactly) not? ("There are more things....") — tim wood
Do we or does anything we know of do anything other than relate to other things? — tim wood
Logic is not the master. — tim wood
Is there another kind of reason in other kinds of animals? Could be, but....so what? We can’t do anything with it,
— Mww
Care to reconsider this? — tim wood
if Kant was so sure noumena was not an intelligible idea, then why bring it up at all? — Constance
That is, what is the ground in the world that makes bringing it up not pure nonsense? — Constance
An excellent question, I think. — Constance
The premise with OLP is that we regularly do not know what the criteria for a concept are (they work behind the scenes as it were),
— Antony Nickles
Oh come on, this is nonsense. — Metaphysician Undercover
People act out of habit when they talk. And acting out of habit is not applying criteria. — Metaphysician Undercover
tell me that no reason is manifested there — tim wood
You appear to have extended this to reason. — tim wood
of animals that appear to have mental capacities (very much to be clarified), it seems to me not that they are different in kind, but in degree. — tim wood
because I have seen with my own eyes.... — tim wood
reluctance of philosophers to venture into the domain of psychology. — Possibility
I’m afraid there’s a lot to unpack here, though. — Possibility
Kant argues that a priori knowledge (what we appear to ‘just know’) can be synthetic......
A priori knowledge can be synthetic...yes. A priori knowledge can also be analytic.
.....and demonstrates this synthesis by converting qualitative variability in phenomenal experience into a rational structure.....
Is there another way to say: demonstrates this synthesis by converting qualitative variability in phenomenal experience into a rational structure? This would be good to know, in order for me to understand why such synthesis allows all a priori knowledge to be synthetic. Sure, you could use qualitative phenomenal experience to justify “to fall up contradicts gravity”, but why would you? And what about a priori knowledge by which no phenomenal experience is at all possible, re: all parts of space are themselves each a space”, yet still has a rational or logical structure?
.....In my own constructionist view this allows for all a priori knowledge to be understood as synthetic - but there is no allowance for this in Kant’s anthropocentric perspective of knowledge. — Possibility
Kant's... criteria......
— Mww
This the philosopher's dream of power. — Antony Nickles
OLP was (initially) directed at traditional analytical philosophy and the metaphysics, representationalism, positivism, and descriptive falacy, etc., of philosophical theories or statements that, among other things: communication/rationality works in one universal or specific way, or towards a particular standard, that it is dependent more on individuals, and that we have more control in how it works. — Antony Nickles
What it (OLP) is trying to do is put the human, say, voice, back into the philosophical discussion by bringing up the contexts in which our concepts live. — Antony Nickles
It's (OLP’s) necessity is to breath new life into a tradition which has removed us from its considerations. — Antony Nickles
The current policy is driven by the notion that all human life has intrinsic value and that our response to covid is all about preserving those valuable human lives... — dazed
I don’t think he believed humans were as constrained by discursive understanding as CPR suggested with regard to noumena. — Possibility
Kant structured this aspect of human perception in an additional dimension of affect or feeling. — Possibility
I have argued from OLP in my post about Wittgenstein’s lion quote (@Mmw) — Antony Nickles
the point of OLP is that words "embody" the unconscious, unexamined ordinary criteria (not made-up, or philosophically-important criteria)--all of the richness that is buried in them of all the different ways we live. — Antony Nickles
Is it always wrong to interfere with autonomy or can it be right under certain conditions? — Tom1352
Copernicus’ revolution, for Kant, was more about the moveability of the spectator than its de-centralisation - even though arguably the most significant effect of that revolution was to de-centralise the limited human perception (empiricism) in relation to knowledge of reality. — Possibility
So Kant synthesised human knowledge (...) and even rendered it moveable (by phenomena) in relation to possible knowledge of reality (noumena) — Possibility
His transcendental or synthetic a priori knowledge (imagination in relation to understanding and judgement) was an anthropocentric perspective of the conditions for knowledge of reality. — Possibility
the structure of metaphysics was more dependent upon ‘feeling’ than he had anticipated. — Possibility
It’s more that no knowledge is at all possible without ‘feeling’. — Possibility
For Kant’s shift to take effect......
Presupposes it didn’t, because:
......Kant was missing a step.....
And that missing step takes the propositional form:
.....de-centring our perspective of temporal reality by rejecting the assumption that the existence of humans (and their rationality) was the plan or purpose of eternity — Possibility