If space has no properties, then how come lines are possible in it? How come circles are possible? How come any geometric figure is possible in it? What governs what is possible in space if not its properties? What governs what space is, if not its properties? — Agustino
They are possibilities which are determined to exist by the nature of space itself — Agustino
space being non-Euclidean determines that the angles in a triangle can add up to something different than 180 degrees, and inversely - space being Euclidean determines that the angles in a triangle necessarily add up to 180 degrees — Agustino
Which is a property of space governed by geometry — Agustino
Does Schopenhauer think space. time and causality are, exhaustively, functions of the human mind, such that they can have no existence or properties beyond, or contradictory to, how we directly experience and intuitively conceive them? — John
By means of what is space the principle of individuation if not by the relationships it creates amongst geometric figures? — Agustino
No lines aren't themselves in space — Agustino
rather they emerge from the properties of space itself — Agustino
are the Platonic Ideas noumenal or phenomenal? — John
Why then are geometrical judgements synthetic a prioris? — Agustino
But the relationships between geometric figures is what space itself is. — Agustino
I mean I ask you again, what else could space be? You say a form of our cognitive faculties... well, to be more exact, what is that? — Agustino
I don't actually remember Schopenhauer using the term stage, but it may be possible. It's been awhile since I read WWR in full. — Agustino
The Platonic Ideas are known outside of space, time and causality, and hence must be higher than the will in the hirearchy — Agustino
I might disagree that Platonic Ideas still presuppose subject/object — Agustino
I would say part of the principle of individuation because time for example also individuates. — Agustino
the Will is closer to an idea or a subject than to matter. — Agustino
Kant/Schopenhauer, because remember all knowledge must be ultimately reducible to some perception — Agustino
If space is inseparable from our cognition, and non-Euclideanness is not perceivable in perception a priori, that means that non-Euclidean geometry cannot be knowledge, since it has no perceptual referent. — Agustino
I don't mean that by stage. I mean space, time and causality by stage. — Agustino
Nonsense, for Kant the thing in itself is recognized as being logically necessary. He says that for there to be representation it follows logically that there must be something that is represented. It is thought by Kant as noumenal only in the sense that it utterly escapes, by its very definition, empirical investigation. — John
If the thing in itself is the noumenal and Will is not it, but rather merely "close to it", then is Will phenomenal? Obviously it cannot be part of the noumenal according to Schopenhauer, because the noumenal cannot have parts (according to both Schopenhauer and Kant). — John
And what about the platonic ideas? are they noumenal? If they are then how can there be more than one idea. And if all four the noumenal (timeless) the ideas ( timeless) the Will ( temporal only) and the phenomenal ( temporal and spatial) are different form one another, then how are there not four ontological categories? — John
And there is no quadruple aspect theory. Will is the ground of the phenomenon. Platonic Ideas are encounters with and glimpses of the thing-in-itself through art, or mystical experiences. The thing-in-itself is the unknown ground or source of the Platonic Ideas and of the Will. So it's still double aspect - Phenomenon composed hirearchically of Will and then the other Representations, and Thing-in-itself. — Agustino
Now Schopenhauer's ontological idealism — Agustino
If part of the stage is empirically real, then Schopenhauer's ontological idealism falls apart. — Agustino
Christians believe that a sex is something sacred, either physical and spiritual connection of partners — Takerian
Might as well admit that discrimination is being implemented, based on the likes of (ir)religious affiliation, culture, or whatever. — jorndoe
And nobody else can either. — Bitter Crank
Have we decided that economic migrants and refugees are a force of nature which are no more controllable than the weather? — Bitter Crank
the one Marquez doesn't (in fact, remaining within his argument, can't) answer: How do we decide when to bring in independent value systems to override the epistemic argument? — csalisbury
If the USSR won some global economic war it could also claim, as you did, that the US today (in the 'today' where the US is communist) is based on the same damn principles and institutions as the USSR at 'that time' (i.e before the US became communist). 'There was always a firm understanding of what the US would become' the USSR intelligentsia would say, 'there was no other alternative.' — csalisbury
And I think it would be very hard to argue that the plantation/slave system of the south wasn't a system of property or political rights — csalisbury
I'm giving you all scientific proof of God(s) existence. — TheMadFool
Yeah? So if the USSR said the US should become communist, the US couldn't claim its own economic system couldn't transition into a communist system? — csalisbury
Explain my understanding of basic institutions or the understanding of Marquez? — csalisbury
I don't a give a pig's brisket (made that up) what you think of it. — csalisbury
I feel like I'd like to continue to buy groceries — Carbon
I'd probably lean more toward saying that forums like this, group discussions, etc. are more pure from a classical stand point. — Carbon
I honestly couldn't care less if she wakes up after taking her class and feels philosophically "enlightened". I'd rather she just pass her class and maybe walk away thinking the educational experience was fun. — Carbon
I'm sincerely (sincerely sincerely, not just rhetorically sincerely) surprised people thought that I thought that anyone was defending slavery. — csalisbury
And we didn't, at all, have a firm understanding of what new institutions the south would have to create to deal with the vacuum caused by emancipation. — csalisbury
According to my own understanding of 'basic institutions' and Marquez's. — csalisbury
So this is where I'm at. — csalisbury
This discussion has become a mess. — Bitter Crank
It seems that there has been more 'testiness' around here lately. Some people have extended their sensitive feelers all the way across the room and squawk every time somebody touches them. Probably fallout from Brexit, Trump, LaPen, et al. Change is in the air, but we can't quite tell from which direction the next disaster will come. Makes people nervous. — Bitter Crank
as thornongil and emptyheady have, cant possibly poke a hole in the argument of someone with accolades — csalisbury
It's work man! — Carbon
except to say he's not in favor of it. Which I believe, and have believed since reading the OP — csalisbury
Again, if everyone agreed with the author, emancipation never would have happened. — csalisbury
The slave system in the american south was a basic institution. — csalisbury
Are you just being sulky again or do you sincerely not understand? (Let me charitable and assume you're just being sulky) — csalisbury
No one beyond the newbie undergrads in philosophy gives a shit about the mystical connection with wisdom you think is required for REAL philosophy or whatever the hell you're supposedly doing. — Carbon
I'd tone it down a notch as you're the exact type of person that turns folks like Mary Ellen off in those sorts of classes. — Carbon