The whole realty/appearance distinction. — Marchesk
can we imagine a place without time? — TiredThinker
Because we have reliable, repeatable, valid sensory experience of the world, we can say we see the world as it is. — Bitter Crank
reality is exactly what we perceive......
Agreed.
......“Ah, but it is always incomplete”.....
Correct. We never perceive everything possible to perceive.
.......tell me the idea of a complete reality that can be presentable to anyone. You cannot.....
Correct. The idea of a complete reality is given by itself, but that the object given by the idea is therefore presentable in its entirety, does not follow from its mere conception.
........showing itself only in certain aspects is proper to all reality, that is the structure of reality.....
Ehhhh.....error of equivocation: for reality to show itself implies intention, which cannot belong to entities having no conception of purpose. Negating the error then leaves the structure of reality undefined.
......Things that present themselves in all their aspects at the same time only exist ideally.....
That which is ideal does have all its aspects present in itself simultaneously, but cannot be a thing that presents itself as existing. The two familiar ideal conceptions, complete in themselves, are space and time, which do not exist in themselves but are merely sound logical conclusions.
.....the ideal cube that you draw on the paper shows six sides.....
No, it does not. It is possible to illustrate a three dimensional object on a two dimensional plane, but an ideal can never be a mere illustrated replica of an object in general.
.......So only this non-existent cube has six sides at the same time.....
No it does not. It is first a contradiction, insofar as non-existence has no extent in space nor duration in time, and second, cutting of the paper makes explicit the third dimension is in the construction of the cube, not the drawing of it.
.......That aspect of the cube that I perceive is the aspect that the cube can show me. It cannot show that same aspect of itself to an earthworm.....
Categorical errors of relation and modality: it is absurd to suppose an object common to differing perceptive physiologies or cognitive sophistication, changes itself in accordance with the system examining it. It is pathologically stupid to then suppose any one cognitive system has the apodeictic means to relate itself to another system diametrically opposed to it. It follows that, e.g, claiming an earthworm sees a cube, is unintelligible (relation), from which follows the claim that the cube presents itself, is empty (modality).
.....Only a human being can see this. Another animal will see it in yet another way.....
To see “this” or to see “it (this) in a different way” is a strictly human qualitative distinction, which suggests it is the capacities of the receiver of the impression, rather than the source of the impression, which generally determines various effects from common cause, but without any sense at all, of what the effects actually are. To claim an earthworm does not perceive as we perceive, is tautologically true, for the simple reason its negation is impossible. Hence, expositions on it are superfluous.
.......This is one of Kant’s mistakes, he thinks that all of these are limitations of our knowledge — Rafaella Leon
I don't see why the mere arrival of the observer should change the way the world is in the way you suggest, so that it is now dependent on his views, however misguided they may be. — Daemon
The interesting question is, if no-one can see it, is there a world as it is? — Echarmion
But I think the original concept of 'the unconditioned' is broader than that. — Wayfarer
So the 'unconditioned' was the source of 'the conditioned' - this was the concept of To Hen, the One of Plotinus, which morphed over time into the 'Divine Intellect'. — Wayfarer
”....Augustine concludes from these observations that intelligible objects cannot be part of reason's own nature or be produced by reason out of itself. They must exist independently of individual human minds....”
Again, I understand that this type of Platonist reasoning is generally out of favour, but it seems intuitively sound to me. — Wayfarer
Do you think there's much awareness of 'the unconditioned, the irreducible', in most current philosophical discourse? — Wayfarer
As in some fact or statement that cannot be false that we can be absolutely sure of. I'm not so sold on why we would need such a thing — khaled
I would say it's unavoidable that we must use reason at least to a certain extent and in some way. — Gregory
What kind of a faculty is it? — Gregory
Now that is very old-fashioned view, some would even say archaic. But that's what I am arguing. — Wayfarer
I've since dropped "mental", and "state of mind" from my account. — creativesoul
I disagree that "The snow is white" is as simple as it looks. — Marchesk
1. All thought/belief consists of mental correlation(s) — creativesoul
Belief is not a mental state, on my view. — creativesoul
thought/belief is any and all mental correlations drawn between 'objects' of physiological sensory perception and/or the agent's own state of mind. — creativesoul
I’m not onboard with your rendering of consciousness....
— Mww
(...) Here's where I differ with Kant.....
In order to know that A is not equal to B, we must know what both consist of, because knowing that they are not equal requires comparison/contrast between the two. — creativesoul
Can we at least agree that there is a difference between our bodies and our reports thereof? — creativesoul
Your body is not an account. Your account is most certainly in the world. — creativesoul
Schopenhauer explains compassion metaphysically; through the concept of his will, all humans are manifestations of one identical will which lies beyond experience — jancanc
Notice that an ‘us’, a community, is a natural entity a plurality of individuals. No appeal to metaphysics, to a non-spatio-temporal unity, is required to explain its existence." — jancanc
Hence when subjects try to understand subjectivity as an object, they must try to take a distance with their own subjectivity, which tends to lead to logical paradoxes. — Olivier5
You also need to understand that he wants money in exchange of the apples — Olivier5
what you remember of an experience is yet another form of experience. — Olivier5
experience still precedes any report, and can never be fully described by reporting. — Olivier5
Unless....... — Olivier5
The poverty of Kant is the supposition that there is stuff we have to have before we can do the things......
Yes, the stuff we have to have is the categories.
.......We make the stuff by doing the things.......
No. Backwards. The stuff of categories make the doing of things possible.
.......Drop meaning, look to use. — Banno
While there are all sorts of language less creatures incapable of drawing correlations between different things, those aren't of interest here, for such creatures aren't capable of attributing meaning, and consciousness is the ability to attribute meaning. — creativesoul
If it is the case that we are both objects in the world and subjects taking account of it and/or ourselves, then the dichotomy cannot be used as a means to draw a distinction between us and our accounts... — creativesoul
For you, the grocer is an object and his subjectivity is irrelevant to you. For the grocer, you are the object and your subjectivity is irrelevant to him.
— Mww
I realize this remark is partly in jest, and in response to a mind denier. I don’t think people treat other people as pure objects, without ever thinking of other people’s opinions — Olivier5
what we have between the ears IS indeed primary, as a matter of fact, because it is necessary for any knowledge to accrue. That’s the purely logical aspect of the problem, the easiest aspect to fathom.......
Agreed.
.......The really tricky part is to realize what we do when we try to think of consciousness — or of phenomena as they ‘appear’ to our consciousness, (...) as an object of knowledge, when we study it as another phenomenon, as another object ‘out there’ as you put it. — Olivier5
It extends to the need for the subject trying to understand himself to remain connected with his own subjectivity, to include himself as part of his description of any experience. — Olivier5
don’t even start to get it. — Olivier5
I reject the subject/object framework altogether. We are both objects in the world and subjects taking account of it — creativesoul
I take similar issue with the very notion of "proposition" (....)....
Ehhhh....all discourse requires them, so we’re sorta stuck with them.
.....and the role that it plays in our experiences — creativesoul
Red cups, apples, and pains in hands are not propositional content. — creativesoul
They are most certainly always part of the correlational content of belief about them. — creativesoul
What happens in the head of the grocer is irrelevant. — Banno
Do you see that in order to understand each other, what goes on between our respective ears must be at least congruent, if not fully matching?
— Mww
No. What goes on between the ears is irrelevant. That's rather the point pushed by PI, that it's what happens that counts, not what goes on in heads. — Banno
This discussion is not only going on in the space between your ears
— Banno
Of course it isn’t, only. But the ground of it, the beginnings, the source, the construction of it, are, and are only. — Mww
If everything begins with what is between your ears, — Banno
I don't agree that everything begins with what is between your ears. — Banno
Drop the notion that the stuff between your ears has primacy. — Banno
The stuff you might describe as "out there" is just as valid. — Banno
you can't have one without the other. — Banno
But has he an argument for this? Or is it just obvious? — Banno
he thinks that both are "between your ears". — Banno
There is stuff that is not between your ears. — Banno
This discussion is not only going on in the space between your ears — Banno
why is it inaccessible to an observer? — Harry Hindu
Isn't it (subjectivity) indirectly accessed via observation of behavior and neural activity? — Harry Hindu
In other words, is the subjective accessible objectively? — Harry Hindu
it seems to me that yours is a path to an unneeded and misleading superstructure... — Banno
This is were I differ, since it seems to me that those things which are private, ineffable, inaccessible, are also not suitable for analysis. — Banno
Kant, like Wittgenstein, pointed to stuff about which we cannot speak. We should take their advice, and not. — Banno