We have no knowledge without perceiving the world. The mechanism is irrelevant to the argument, about the content of knowledge. — charleton
There just is no "simple looking and seeing what is out there". — apokrisis
With respect, my interlocutor is trying to refute the necessary claim I made that the source of all knowledge is from perception. — charleton
I never even implied that. I said what I said, that the source of all our knowledge is from what we perceive. There is simply no avoiding this.
But I even gave exceptions contra Locke, that we have limited instinctual "knowledge".
The problem is 'simple looking' is not a problem for me, as accepting the limits of perception is the only clear way to begin to over come them. — charleton
I'm not ignoring it, but you are misunderstanding it. — charleton
This is baloney, of course, as it has been pointed out before. It pretents that Hume can't recognise that these events are in relations of precedency, contiguity and constant conjunction. — Πετροκότσυφας
OK, I hear your assertion and await the supporting counter-argument. What could be more accurate than saying the past constrains the future? — apokrisis
It is inaccurate to say the past absolutely determines the future - that there is no actual quantum grain of free spontaneity. — apokrisis
And it would be even more inaccurate to say the past leaves the future completely undetermined, or radically free and spontaneous. On the whole - as you agree about stability - the future seems pretty classically predictable. — apokrisis
So why is my constraints-based view of causality incorrect when - strictly speaking - it covers both the classical determinism and the quantum indeterminism? — apokrisis
How is it sufficiently stable? — apokrisis
Let's take gravity as an example. On a Humean account, gravity is just a shorthand for objects behaving in a similar attractive manner, such that bowling balls and feathers fall at the same rate on Earth, or the planets orbit in the same manner around the sun.
But Einstein notices a connection between acceleration and gravity, and posits the acceleration of objects through curved space as the gravitational force. So now you've moved from a shorthand for particulars to a very general principle. — Marchesk
Now, I am curious: how would you distinguish such a "Humean" universe from one that is "enriched" with your favored metaphysics? — SophistiCat
His argument is more subtle, suggesting that a priori reasoning does not predict the outcomes of causal interactions and that as humans we have since time immemorial simply had to OBSERVE and conclude from observations causality. — charleton
Edit: or even better, read Hume. — Πετροκότσυφας
1) the source of all knowledge is perception. This is irrefutable — charleton
But you seem to what to avoid that what we perceive is the source and fudge it by saying it comes from a 'relation'. Even if that we not a fudge, it would still not avoid the irrefutability of the statement, as there is no relation without that which is perceived, and ipso fact the perception IS the relationship between the world and the knowledge. — charleton
...ipso facto the perception IS the relationship between the world and the knowledge. — charleton
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