This means that our experience of the world is ineluctably conceptually shaped. That is what it would mean to say that Kant thinks we cannot 'get outside our conceptual schemas', although I doubt he ever expressed it exactly like that. — John
Novices are generally not good at any activity; so this wouldn't seem to support the idea that practiced philosophers are bad at philosophy. In fact if they were not good at it they would not be able to recognize how bad undergraduates are. There is no absolute good and bad; expertise is relative only to the range of expertise within any field. — John
Without that it's only human, it's only us complexly ooting at each other about homo sapien stuff, and that's it. — Wosret
so we both can get outside of them, and he isn't trying to justify some cultural prejudices, but secure the objectivity and universality of thought itself. — Wosret
Did Kant mean it in the broadest sense that we can't get outside of some form of conceptualizing the world, or that we can't get outside of specific fundamental concepts? — Marchesk
Beyond Kant, the anti-realist argument would be that we can't get outside or thinking about the world to see what the world is actually like, and adjust our concepts accordingly. But that flies in the face of history and most fields of knowledge, were humans do revise their concepts based on new knowledge and experiences.
What we moderns think about the world is different in many ways than what various ancient groups though, because our knowledge and experiences of the world has grown quite a bit. — Marchesk
Some concepts do seem to be fundamental; space, time, causality, materiality, form, function, quantity, quality, relation, modality. I just thought of those off the top of my head; I'm sure there are more. Do you think we can do without any of those? — John
I saw a study that suggested that dumber people were more dishonest. — Wosret
I think that philosophers are more honest, and I think that honesty is the true mark of intelligence. — Wosret
What the hell are we good at? — Bitter Crank
You might believe the best was achieved by Spinoza, but won't it always be possible that I could disagree with you, just as I might disagree with you that Mozart's music is greater than Bach's or Beethoven's, or Miles Davis'. — John
Perhaps not. But we can revise our thinking on them. And we can propose concepts without one or more of those categories you listed.
The idea that time and space arise from something more fundamental, or that the cosmos is massively contingent and without any prescriptive laws of nature. Or that time doesn't really flow, and the future already exists. Stuff like that.
Did Kant think those things couldn't exist in the world? Was carving nature at its joints incoherent to him? — Marchesk
If the cosmos were "massively contingent" it would be unintelligible, so we can put that one to rest, I think. Does time flow or do things move (change) in time? The idea that the future "already exists" seems unintelligible. But from the point of view of eternity, all that is past, present and future is eternally present. "Already exists" suggests a before and after though, and yet there is before and after only in time, not in eternity. None of this stuff is decidable by science, though; it is all metaphysics — John
Corollary I: Hence it follows that God is the efficient cause of all things that can come within the scope of the infinite intellect. — Ethics
PROP. XVIII. God is the indwelling and not the transient cause of all things.
Proof.—All things which are, are in God, and must be conceived through God (by Prop. xv.), therefore (by Prop. xvi., Coroll. i.) God is the cause of those things which are in him. This is our first point. Further, besides God there can be no substance (by Prop. xiv.), that is nothing in itself external to God. This is our second point. God, therefore, is the indwelling and not the transient cause of all things. Q.E.D. — Ethics (Gutenberg)
God is the efficient cause not only of the existence of things but also of their essence.
Spinoza actually says that God is the "efficient cause" of both the existence and the eternal essence of things. — John
Do we need something other as a comparison to notice whether we're poor at an activity? — Marchesk
Here's the suggested evidence that humans perform poorly at philosophy:
1. Errors in reasoning affecting even professional philosophers. — Marchesk
2. Failure to resolve issues explored by the ancient Greeks. — Marchesk
3. Failure to reach consensus on almost anything. — Marchesk
That professional philosophers generally agree with the assessment that their colleagues are poor at doing philosophy. — Marchesk
It's like saying humans are bad at reasoning. No, we're very bloody good at it actually compared to every other life form we know of. — Baden
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