Here's a small chance, a chink in the wall of Kant*. What if talk of the cup perceived and of the cup's ding an sich are talk of the very same thing? Perhaps there is just one cup?Realism doesn’t entail there is one cup in the sense that you outlined. If we sense objects, then it is meaningful and correct to say that there is a cup-in-itself and a cup-that-we-perceive because there is a gap between them. — Bob Ross
My purpose is of course to try to restore metaphysics' reputation to a certain extent. — Leontiskos
But a corpse is viscerally different to a sleeping or comatose body. "All our reactions are different"....responsiveness... — Fooloso4
I linked to a substantive elaboration from Wolfram MathWorld.Please elaborate. — Benj96
That's a pretty close analogue. Is it harmless? It's not philosophy, not metaphysics, and not physics.Of course, this is... close to "fan fiction" writing of the nature of reality and the universe. — Christoffer
...was a joke directed at Metaphysics as an Illegitimate Source of Knowledge, another thread in which Bob questioned Metaphysics on the grounds that it was, at it's core, imaginary stories. The aim, roughly, was to draw attention to Bob's apparent change of heart, given his endorsement of the two-worlds view of Transcendental Realism. It was a crude attempt at asking how Bob might reconcile these apparently incongruous views.See how metaphysics leads one astray? — Banno
Explaining a joke is like dissecting a frog. You understand it better but the frog dies in the process. — E.B. White
I'll admit to a prejudice towards a relatively direct, common usage sort of realism. No apology. — Banno
Probably not, given certain prejudices about what a "real" response might be.Wittgensteinian hand-waving isn't a real response. — Leontiskos
I wasn't appealing to "another metaphysical claim", but to common usage.If the claim that there are two cups is metaphysical, then so is the counterclaim that there is only one. — Leontiskos
aren't we getting a little over-simplistic here? — J
...except that I think what's going on is mostly veridical. There are true statements about the world. Lots of 'em.The point is that, veridical or not, something is going on. — J
Yeah, I can see your lack of comprehension.I don’t think you have said much in terms of your contentions yet. — Bob Ross
Interesting: could you please elaborate? — Bob Ross
Most of them?So, what arguments do you find convincing against transcendental idealism? — Bob Ross
Our attitude to what is alive and to what is dead is not the same. All our reactions are different. If someone says, “That cannot simply come from the fact that living beings move in such-and-such ways and dead ones don’t”, then I want to suggest to him that this is a case of the transition ‘from quantity to quality’.
I was wondering about the visceral reaction. — Fooloso4
A shame. It is apparent that arguing the point pushes you to defend Kantianism, reinforcing it in your mind.Not really. — Bob Ross
Yep. You say that as if it were a bad thing. I suggest that the idea that we need a proof that things exist is affected, an intellectual pretence. Descartes' bad idea. There are other ways of dealing with sceptics.This just disqualifies the idea that nothing exists, and nothing produces experience. — Bob Ross
Doesn't that sound a bit too good? A bit like the way in which disciples will praise the words of their Guru? Are his ideas perfect, and if not where do they go astray? If idealism is that good, it's odd that philosopher overwhelmingly reject it. Perhaps Kant was right, so far as he went, but was asking the wrong questions.That’s the nice thing about Kant: he stuck to a very oddly specific subject matter which can easily subsume all others underneath it. — Bob Ross
Your very participation here shows that you hold that there are others who understand something of what you are saying and will participate in a dialogue with you. You're already well past "I think therefore I am".Like what? — Bob Ross
remains gobbledegook.Perhaps, the singularity from which everything arises, is in a superposition with reality. That is, a double state, in one state the universe exists as a singularity, in the other it exists in the state we are familiar with, with causality and dimensions. — Benj96
this is not a modern or contemporary development. — Fooloso4
Perhaps I was not clear. I am happy with what you have said here.I have said this several times. — Fooloso4
I wasn't referring to any reaction of regret; just the simple fact that a dead body is different to a live one. I was attempting to draw a parallel with Wittgenstein's observations concerning pain. Too long a bow, it seems.Hunters do not react this way when they kill. — Fooloso4
Oh, not a contention, to be sure - but while Tully might speak for himself, it's plain that talk about a thing about which we can say nothing is at least awkward.By Ciceronianus own admission, it is not a contention with transcendental idealism; as it is a necessary and perfectly anticipated consequence of it. — Bob Ross
I'll take your word for it, although I recall reading a similar account elsewhere, with Plato writing differing accounts for various audiences. What's curious is the way in which talk of division or of a spirit leaving the body comes so easily.The language "divided in two" is loaded with dualism.
— Banno
It reflects the dualism that Socrates is responding to. Then as now the division of body and soul was common. As you say:
The common prejudice is that at death something leaves the body.
— Banno
He uses the division of body and soul, and in doing so brings that belief into question. — Fooloso4
Oh, yes. How you square this with semantic holism remains unexplained.Notice how I talk about not taking concepts out of their native contexts? — baker
Is it? Or is that an act of faith on your part? You put your trust in it being possible without the case being demonstrated.It is possible to make physics do that, though. — baker
The same happens when a Chemist claims thatOdd, isn't it, that when some folk discover that the chair they are sitting on is composed of atoms, and is overwhelmingly space, they sometimes decide that therefore it's no longer really a chair. — Banno
As if love vanished after such explanations."there is no love, there are only chemicals in the brain" — baker
One core problem has already been mentioned by .Any book suggestions? Or counter arguments to transcendental idealism that you find hold weight? — Bob Ross
i don't think I said or implied otherwise. I was questioning the phrasingBut does anyone disagree and claim that the body keeps working the same way after death? — Leontiskos
I don't think you are on the same page.a single, unified person is divided in two — Fooloso4
Good. Keep reading. You may grow out of it.I am starting to embrace transcendental idealism... — Bob Ross
Well, yes - that's what these posts are about. I'm pointing out that we do not do so by specifying an essence; that the way we use language will often suffice. So it will quickly become obvious that your use of "universe" differed in scale from that of other folk.Sure. But isn't one of the methods of Philosophy to ask and analyse meanings and definitions of terms in the sentence trying to find out if the concepts are meaningful and understandable? — Corvus
