 frank
frank         
         You believe that science is in support the view that we can't know the rest of the world? — Ciceronianus
 john27
john27         
          Banno
Banno         
         yet state of the art science supports his view. — frank
 Ciceronianus
Ciceronianus         
         What are you referring to by "the rest of the world"? — frank
 frank
frank         
         the second is used by cognitive scientists in setting out how the brain works. — Banno
 frank
frank         
         What are you referring to by "the rest of the world"?
— frank
What are you referring to by "science"? — Ciceronianus
 Ciceronianus
Ciceronianus         
         he question we're addressing is the probative value of evidence, which presupposes representations of "truth" whatever that may be, and which is the subject matter of this thread. That is, when I see something, of what probative value is my having seen the thing in terms of proving the thing exits? That is, does the evidence I possess prove the thing I assert, namely that the thing is as I say it is? It seems we need to know what the thing is if we seek to establish whether my claims about it are true. — Hanover
 Ciceronianus
Ciceronianus         
          frank
frank         
         If you made an argument, you'd be deep in a form of rationalism.
— frank
Why? — Banno
 frank
frank         
         How about this, then. What do you claim is the subject matter of science, or the sciences, or scientific inquiry? Or, say, of geology? — Ciceronianus
 frank
frank         
         Hmm. What is it you think rationalism is? Because it is beyond me how you might take what has been said here to imply that Tully and I have been advocating Descartes, Spinoza or Leibniz. — Banno
 Hanover
Hanover         
         One is a plane. the other is something like an interaction between you and the plane. — Banno
The notion of a thing-in-itself. This is a nonsense. — Banno
 Manuel
Manuel         
         The noumenal anchors us in realism. That the thing in itself is unknowable doesn't mean it's meaningless or nonsense. It serves the purpose of rooting reality in the world, not just in our head. — Hanover
 Banno
Banno         
         This means: we have 2 things: (1) planes and (2) perceptions of planes. — Hanover
Am I right so far? — Hanover
 hypericin
hypericin         
         Better, surely, to think of the plane as an individual, and your seeing it as something you might do, rather than as an individual. — Banno
 Banno
Banno         
         Perception is an activity, not a thing. But, this activity consists of the construction of phantom things in the mind. — hypericin
 frank
frank         
         But here's an important thing... those "phantom things" are not what we see, taste and touch; they are what our seeing, tasting and touching, at least in part, consists in — Banno
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