If someone says you don't understand, that is not an ad hominem argument. It's not even an insult.
— T Clark
It is. — Jackson
You don't understand?
— chiknsld
Please refrain from ad hominems. — Jackson
My own view is that I have no grounds to accept the proposition that once there was nothing - nothing can't even be defined. — Tom Storm
It's a dogma, an unproven conjecture, that evolution progresses by accidental mutations of the genes. There is zero evidence that this is generally the case — Haglund
Then explain what you meant by babies are aware of quantity — Harry Hindu
There seems to be disagreement about what kind of knowledge math is. As I noted in a previous post, there are studies that show that very young children, babies, are aware of quantity, so there seems to be some inborn "knowledge" of math. On the other hand, we have to learn how to use it.
— T Clark
Which is just another way of saying that conscious experience is quantifiable, — Harry Hindu
I think examples might help. — Haglund
It's not exactly clear though what you mean about a priori knowledge and what kind of knowledge you refer to. You give a lot of definitions from the web, but its still somewhat unclear to me. — Haglund
It's design, true. But you need to know in advance if your design won't crumble on construction. In other words, you have to know in advance, a priori, what the new construction must be about, more or less. Of course you have seen trees over a river, but to base your bridge on a fallen tree... There has to be, somewhat vague still, premeditated knowledge of some sort. Your design will influence your knowledge and vice-versa. True, some based on previous encounters, but new a priori too (which may turn out good or bad, like the resonating of the bridge. — Haglund
Don't you somehow construct it mentally first? Don't you need a priori knowledge of the bridge you construct first? — Haglund
If we know nothing, we still have self conscience and awareness — SpaceDweller
It seems self-evident to me that knowing things and asking "how do we know things?" are qualitatively different. — jamalrob
Grouping all of this stuff under the same term is surely just a historical artifact. Just say no to epistemology. — jamalrob
You think the innate concept of quantity, undeniably present in animals, is an innate knowledge of math? — Haglund
Construct zillions of relationships between them. That evolves. Giving a priori knowledge of the world. Einstein never saw curved spacetime. He had a priori knowledge of black holes. A baby has a lot of instinctive knowledge about the world when pooped in it. It has too. Without a priori, tacit, instinctive, intuitive, knowledge, necessarily vague still, it won't be possible to continue living — Haglund
Well, this is something like what we are doing in philosophy, rather than what people are doing when they come to know things. It's what some philosophers do when they're trying to work out what knowledge is. — jamalrob
This suggests you understood the process to be one that's proposed to be undertaken by people generally, when they come to know things, and not as part of philosophical examination. — jamalrob
I'm saying that you gotta have a priori knowledge of something you gonna construct. — Haglund
Let's take 2+2=4. What type of knowledge is knowing 2+2=4? How do you know that 2+2=4? — Harry Hindu
Is knowing that 2+2=4 knowing what 2+2=4 is about, or how to use or apply to real-life experiences, or a representation of real-life experiences of quantifying and counting experienced objects? It seems that knowing that 2+2=4 is experiencing two of something and another two of something becoming four of something. In other words, 2+2=4 is only meaningful if it can be applied to, or representative of, experience of counting real-world things which are not numbers themselves, just as words are not meaningful if not applied to real-world things that are not words themselves. — Harry Hindu
I’ve never seen justified true belief described as a process before. It’s just an observation (in the Theaetetus) of what we often mean when we speak of knowing, viz., something we believe, that is true and justified. — jamalrob
Some would argue that this type of thinking doesn't belong on a philosophy forum. — Noble Dust
Does a bird which migrates south for the first time in its life use a priori knowledge to get there, or are they just copying the others? — Tom Storm
But they never saw the first bridge built. — Haglund
Same. I've argued (badly) for intuition over the years here, but I eventually realized it's self-evident that the vast majority of people in the world use intuition primarily, and it's only the smaller minority of analytically-minded people who would bother to join a philosophy forum that deride it's primacy. — Noble Dust
Then it becomes a twofold question of 1) are the vast majority of people deluded and only a select few understand how truth is obtained, and 2) alternatively, is this criticism of intuition just a prejudice of the intelligent against the less intelligent? And where does that path logically lead? The ivory tower is tall indeed. — Noble Dust
But if there were no bridges before they we're built, you must have had knowledge to build it. How can't that be a priori? — Haglund
Kant thought the bachelor example was analytic and math synthetic. — Gregory
You seem to think there exists no a priori knowĺedge. But correct me if I'm wrong. But if that's the case how can we anticipate unknown territory with which we don't have interacted? — Haglund
Don't you think Einstein's notion of spacetime is a priori constructed? — Haglund
Doesn't an engineer has synthetic a priori knowledge about the bridge? — Haglund
This is far truer of humans than other creatures. — apokrisis
This is what Peirce fixed with his pragmatic theory of truth. He showed how reasoning involved this feedback loop of abduction, deduction and inductive confirmation. — apokrisis
When children learn mathematics they learn a synthetic skill, not an analytic one. Sure they start out counting the numbers but even this is not analytic
for them sincr ultimately they are to develope a synthetic skill (as Kant pointed out). Synthetic ability is dum da dum creative intelligence! — Gregory
This thread is an example of the creative mentality while analytic thought is usually defined as finding meanings to language instead of combining words to form a new synthesis — Gregory
And yet knowledge is pragmatically a matter of experience. We develop habits of future expectation based on a history of past events. — apokrisis
So speaking of "knowledge", or "truth", or "facts", has this unfortunate tendency to push it all into some Platonic realm of surety quite separate from the uncertain world. The truth "exists" in some eternal present. — apokrisis
Sure, it is useful also to take this kind of deductive approach to knowledge/truth/facts. We can abduct to make some general guess about what could be the past, and thus possibly be the future. From this hypothesis, we can then deduce the observable consequences.
That is, we can deduce the counterfactuals. We can figure out what we ought to see in the future if our guess is indeed right ... and thus also discover if what we guessed instead seems more like a wrong hypothesis.
The last bit - the checking of the predictions to confirm/deny the deductive argument - is the inductive confirmation. The more times the theory works, the more justified becomes our belief that it must be true. — apokrisis
Deduction - as abstract syntax - works when firmly anchored in the pragmatism of learning from the world so as to be able to live in that world. But knowledge, truth and facts aren't literally the objects of some other world. — apokrisis
But 2 plus 2 is four and there is a process there which is more than finding new words. — Gregory
So there are linguistic skills learned analytically and processes learn synthetically, both being different in *how* humans learn them. — Gregory
That's an example of an analytic truth, not synthetic. The value is that it is definitional. It tells you what a bachelor is. — Hanover
I would be interested to hear what others have to say about a priori - and synthetic a priori. There may be space in this discussion to explore the idea of properly basic beliefs. These are all part of a foundationalist view of reality. — Tom Storm
I think introspection is a valid form of empirical knowledge.
— T Clark
But introspection illusions, no? — 180 Proof
Our intuitions are not there for the purpose of truth. That's a pretty easy one to figure out if you think about it. — noAxioms
I can remember reading about the baby's retina aleady stimulating the brain with shapes. Don't ask me how they found out... Maybe you have seen it with your eyes closed. Concentric rings flowing in and outwards. Surely the bodily baby shape somehow projects in the baby brain. — Haglund
Nothing. Knowledge takes the form of sensory data. — Harry Hindu
Knowledge of god can't be empirical, although you can see them all around. — Haglund
The baby already has knowledge of the world without ever having walked in it. How can that be? The knowledge must have evolved already in the womb, with closed eyes. In a sense the baby is in the world 9 months. Structures in the brain, without halt, running around during evolving from nothing to baby size. Baby eyes sending patterns, brain reacting, balance, body sending formal information, baby brain reacting. Knowledge forming. No tabula rasa. Then we are thrown in. The world showing itself. The world projected in the fertile soil of the baby brain. — Haglund
How does the baby dog know to go to mamma's nipples? The dog image or dog knowledge is already there a priori, contrary to the a priori knowledge of the goose. Smaller brain. — Haglund
However, the actual translation of his ideas is potentially problematic, especially the idea of going beyond good and evil. What would this mean? It could be used to justify almost anything. — Jack Cummins
Nothing is at last sacred but the integrity of your own mind. Absolve you to yourself, and you shall have the suffrage of the world. I remember an answer which when quite young I was prompted to make to a valued adviser, who was wont to importune me with the dear old doctrines of the church. On my saying, What have I to do with the sacredness of traditions, if I live wholly from within? my friend suggested, — “But these impulses may be from below, not from above.” I replied, “They do not seem to me to be such; but if I am the Devil’s child, I will live then from the Devil.” No law can be sacred to me but that of my nature. Good and bad are but names very readily transferable to that or this; the only right is what is after my constitution, the only wrong what is against it. — Emerson
