What's weird about my view is its stubborn and intense anthropocentrism. — plaque flag
Feuerbach — plaque flag
the world is only for or through such persons. (….) the world is independent of any particular individual subject, — plaque flag
I'd say the subject is just a person, a total human being. — plaque flag
So I'll concede that, strictly speaking, bodies do not experience. — plaque flag
Is anything real ? — plaque flag
Are you really (earnestly) claiming that human bodies experiencing the world aren't real ? — plaque flag
our subjectivity only makes sense if understood as localized in world-encompassed flesh. — plaque flag
I can only aspire not to be stupid about it…. — Janus
We know nothing of a world apart from the one given to our timebinding cultural flesh, though this same flesh can daydream about pure ur-matter or pure fleshless subjectivity, forgetting itself as a condition of possibility for that daydream — plaque flag
Are we then allowed to say…..(the) actually perceived…..should….be regarded as…. intrinsically foreign to it…. — Husserl
“What makes itself known here — by being made known in intentional unities pertaining to mental processes of consciousness — is obviously something essentially transcendent. According to all this it is clear that even the higher transcendency characterizing the physical thing as determined by physics does not signify reaching out beyond the world which is for consciousness, or for every Ego functioning as a cognizing subject.”
-Husserl — plaque flag
…..our deliberations….did not take due notice of the physical thing as determined by physics….for which…. (the perceptually given) physical thing (…) is said to function as a “mere appearance,” perhaps even as something “merely subjective.”…. — Husserl
Are we then allowed to say…..(the) actually perceived…..should….be regarded as an appearance of…..something else, intrinsically foreign to it and separated from it? May we say that, theoretically considered, this something else should be accepted as a reality, completely unknown by acquaintance, which must be assumed hypothetically in order to explain the course of mental appearance- processes? — Husserl
…..such theories are possible only as long as one avoids seriously fixing one’s eyes on, and scientifically exploring, the sense of a physical thing-datum and, therefore, of “any physical thing whatever,” a sense implicit in experience’s own essence, the sense which functions as the absolute norm for all rational discourse about physical things. — Husserl
————-The perceived physical thing itself is always and necessarily precisely the thing which the physicist explores and scientifically determines following the method of physics. — Husserl
I'm not a fan of reductionism. — Manuel
We eliminate as much as we reasonably can — Manuel
All I'm claiming, is that I believe the idea of the "thing-in-itself" is more coherent, for the type of limiting notion Kant was introducing. — Manuel
If we want to attribute only what is strictly necessary to such an idea as the negative noumenon, then it is simpler to assume the existence of a single "thing" — Manuel
Plurality is a category and can only apply to phenomena…. — Jamal
We see plurality….. — Manuel
isn't Kant making an assumption by saying there are "things in themselves"? — Manuel
….is Kant actually progressing critically and undogmatically as he claims? — Count Timothy von Icarus
that is just what language is, whether "ordinary" lingo or mathematical or formal logical. — Janus
I never would regard ChatGPT as an authoritative source. — Quixodian
the language that we speak fundementally shapes how we experience the world, turns out to be quite weak….. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Kant altered the meaning of ‘noumena’ in line with his philosophical requirements. — Quixodian
As Mww has pointed out, and if he is right, things in themselves are not noumena. — Janus
we can have no idea about its (our thinking’s) soundness except it has empirical or logical justification. — Janus
Is abstract reasoning not all and only a matter of language use? — Janus
I disagree that "anything experienced has already been conceptualized" is necessarily true. — T Clark
This leads to the criticism that Kant's analysis cuts us off from the world, entrapping us in our own subjectively-modulated reality. — Quixodian
….an example of a concept that is easy to grasp in principle, but is almost impossible to form or recognise an image of. — Quixodian
Lao Tzu would say you can experience the Tao. You just can't conceptualize it or speak about it. — T Clark
So, it seems noumena belong to an empty set, which cannot even be named or categorized? — Janus
…..it may be possible to give an example of some kind of thing. — Janus
can you give me an example of anything that would be classed as noumenal? — Janus
If only objects of the senses, that is those things which appear to us are things in themselves…… — Janus
If only objects of the senses, that is those things which appear to us (….), would space, time, causality and the perceiving subject be noumena, according to Kant? — Janus
”What things things is not itself a thing” — T Clark
Descartes should have said: "thinking is occurring." — Tom Storm
Does Being present itself directly to humans, or do humans have to re-present being? — charles ferraro
I do not agree with your interpretation of Kant here. — Metaphysician Undercover