Basically, I think maybe the disagreement comes down to a confusion in terms. I suggest that "human reason itself" is different altogether (and is also confused itself) than the rationality inherent in the forms of art--their rationality is not "arbitrarily isolate[d]" by us; they are categorically independent from us, wrapped up in the means of art; free, if not from our opinion, from our control (our "meaning"), from our arbitrariness, and our falling into taste or mere experience. Whatever the reason you want/need to maintain a "subjective relation" (not capturedelieve in the Pleasant and the Sublime) we do not have a "variable" "relation" to knowledge of the forms of art (other than to know and use them). When I speak of possibilities of the forms, it is not a possibility to be rational, it is the open-ended possibilities of their rationality. And, again, this is not an "ontological" structure; there is no "object" in relation to the Beautiful (Witt's analogous "concepts" are not of a metaphysical or "objective" world). We do not make claims to "objectivity", we can make claims about art because of the rationality in their forms. A main point of mine is that there is rationality without the idea of "objectivity". In concert, our epistemology does not have to be more "accurate" so much as realize that knowledge in aesthetics does not ensure agreement, certainty, universality, etc. (what we philosophically have wanted from knowledge). This does not eat away at its sense of rationality as much as leave those things in our hands, up to our ability to evoke that rationality for others to see. Again, maybe this comes down to a misunderstanding that the rationality of the forms of art should not be confused with the critic giving us "reasons"--evidence, perspective, connections, etc.--to see the rationality inherent in the forms of art in the example of a work. We do not vary the structure, we vary in our capability or desire to discuss art in relation to its rational, formal structure. — Antony Nickles
Hang on - I’m not talking about a normative perspective, but the possibility of a normative understanding (a developing rationality) that seeks to orient differentiated perspectives in a rational, overarching (and irreducible) structure — Possibility
Would I be correct in assuming that you are a realist( I understand there are many varieties of it)? In other words, that you believe with Kant that, while we can never attain the thing in itself, progress in human knowledge possible as an asymptotic goal via successive approximations? More specifically, do you believe that our models attempt to mirror or correspond to an independently existing reality? — Joshs
If so, then I assume you reject various relativisms( postmodernism, etc) that argue reason and logic rest on arbitrary, ungroundable assumptions, and that you prefer Popper’s Kantian notion of scientific process through falsification over Kuhn and Feyerabend’s post-Hegelian claims that science does not ‘progress’ but changes in arbitrary ways through paradigm shifts? — Joshs
Even so, with that moveability, which I understand, I am left with this seemingly unrelated moveability, which I do not......
So Kant synthesised human knowledge (...) and even rendered it moveable (by phenomena) in relation to possible knowledge of reality (noumena)
— Possibility
......insofar as, according to Kant, there is no knowledge of noumenal reality possible for intelligences imbued with merely discursive understanding, such as is claimed for humans. Would I be correct in supposing you mean, that because of the speculative predication of phenomena, human knowledge is restricted to a sensory-determinant empirical domain, in effect removing it from any noumenal reality? That actually does make sense to me, in spite of the inconsistency explicit in the concept of “moveability”. — Mww
I don’t think he believed humans were as constrained by discursive understanding as CPR suggested with regard to noumena. — Possibility
Kant structured this aspect of human perception in an additional dimension of affect or feeling. — Possibility
Understanding itself is not constrained with respect to noumena; it is allowed that understanding thinks objects belonging to the categories, and those objects would be called noumena. On the other hand, if the categories can only apply to phenomena, and phenomena are the only possible objects of experience, and objects of understanding called noumena are themselves not phenomena, then it follows noumena cannot be cognized as objects of experience.
“....But, in this case, a noumenon is not a particular intelligible object for our understanding; on the contrary, the kind of understanding to which it could belong is itself a problem, for we cannot form the most distant conception of the possibility of an understanding which should cognize an object, not discursively by means of categories, but intuitively in a non-sensuous intuition....”
So we are constrained by discursive understanding with respect to cognitions, but understanding itself is not constrained with respect to noumena as general conceptions. — Mww
But at the same time, he had little precious respect for the burgeoning science of psychology, which makes me wonder why he felt the need to examine purely subjective conditions with which this aspect of human perception concerns itself, albeit outside moral considerations. Transcendental moral philosophy is necessarily predicated on subjective conditions, sure, but knowledge of calculus and dump trucks? Or, our feeling of the beautiful/sublime inspired by them?Ehhh.....not so sure about that. Seems all he did was take the transcendental doctrine of a faculty of judgement with respect to empirical cognitions, and transplanted it into an a priori ground for something beyond itself. — Mww
Still, in the preface to the A critique, he made it a point to have “.....the intention of erecting a complete and solid edifice of metaphysical science...”, elaborated in the B preface, “.....attempt to introduce a complete revolution in the procedure of metaphysics, after the example of the geometricians and natural philosophers....”.
So I suppose all that in the CofJ is how such completion is attained. — Mww
Kant argues that a priori knowledge (what we appear to ‘just know’) can be synthetic......
A priori knowledge can be synthetic...yes. A priori knowledge can also be analytic.
.....and demonstrates this synthesis by converting qualitative variability in phenomenal experience into a rational structure.....
Is there another way to say: demonstrates this synthesis by converting qualitative variability in phenomenal experience into a rational structure? This would be good to know, in order for me to understand why such synthesis allows all a priori knowledge to be synthetic. Sure, you could use qualitative phenomenal experience to justify “to fall up contradicts gravity”, but why would you? And what about a priori knowledge by which no phenomenal experience is at all possible, re: all parts of space are themselves each a space”, yet still has a rational or logical structure?
.....In my own constructionist view this allows for all a priori knowledge to be understood as synthetic - but there is no allowance for this in Kant’s anthropocentric perspective of knowledge. — Possibility
Which is fine, depending on what you mean by constructionist, given that the concept exemplifies the difference between some speculative epistemology in metaphysics based on reason, and some psychology of learning in the physical world based on experience alone. Although, it might be hard to disseminate how all a priori knowledge is the kind of knowledge susceptible to being learned, as opposed to being merely thought. Might be what Kant had in mind with:
“....For it would be absurd to think of grounding an analytical judgement on experience....”
So does your constructionist perspective deny analytic a priori knowledge?
Yes, we learn from a young age by means of qualitative relation, and I suppose psychology has more to say about it than philosophy. — Mww
reluctance of philosophers to venture into the domain of psychology. — Possibility
I’m afraid there’s a lot to unpack here, though. — Possibility
Well, of animals that appear to have mental capacities (very much to be clarified), it seems to me not that they are different in kind, but in degree. (I'm thinking) Kant appealed to reason in itself - the reasonable being - obviously exemplified in human thinking, but not thereby exhausted by it.What warrant have we to classify the mental capacities of lesser animals, — Mww
of animals that appear to have mental capacities (very much to be clarified), it seems to me not that they are different in kind, but in degree. — tim wood
because I have seen with my own eyes.... — tim wood
tell me that no reason is manifested there — tim wood
You appear to have extended this to reason. — tim wood
And might well you think, but why (exactly) not? ("There are more things....")So we’re going to gain something, are we, by using that gross circularity to tell us about the exact same thing but in a different situation under different conditions? I think not, — Mww
Do we or does anything we know of do anything other than relate to other things?There is no use whatsoever for inventing concepts like understanding, consciousness, synthesis, experience, knowledge.....reason itself, except as means for US, as humans, to relate to other things. — Mww
You may remember a line from an old sci-fi movie, which I here paraphrase, "Logic is not the master."But logic informs us — Mww
Care to reconsider this? I am from other posts of yours 110% convinced that you're right and I'm wrong. In the present instance, however, your expression of that appears to have me right. Please mend, I'd rather know than be right.Is there another kind of reason in other kinds of animals? Could be, but....so what? We can’t do anything with it, — Mww
I think not,
— Mww
And might well you think, but why (exactly) not? ("There are more things....") — tim wood
Do we or does anything we know of do anything other than relate to other things? — tim wood
Logic is not the master. — tim wood
Is there another kind of reason in other kinds of animals? Could be, but....so what? We can’t do anything with it,
— Mww
Care to reconsider this? — tim wood
In what way? Where would I start? Help me out? Is there another kind of reason in other kinds of animals? Could be, but....so what? We can’t do anything with it, — Mww
Consider what you consider certain. That certainty must be subject to the same critique, Does that suddenly make you feel less certain?given gross circularity, that which is derived from it cannot be any more certain then the circularity itself permits. — Mww
And it seems strange to me you would reserve reason to humans. — tim wood
Do you say that dogs, e.g., are incapable of reason or capable of reason (near as you can tell)? — tim wood
Are you prepared to say we're the only beings in the universe able to reason? — tim wood
given gross circularity, that which is derived from it cannot be any more certain then the circularity itself permits.
— Mww
Consider what you consider certain. That certainty must be subject to the same critique, Does that suddenly make you feel less certain? — tim wood
For your consideration, Bell's Theorem and Bell's inequality. It turns out that what as a matter of logic cannot be, is the ordinary and usual process of the world. And while I hate reference to quantum physics in this kind of discussion, my defense here is that there is nothing whatsoever quantum about the tests themselves and the results of the measurements. Or as you have it, "just because we think the world a certain way doesn’t mean it couldn’t be any other way."What I consider certain is the impossibility of it being otherwise. — Mww
One informs the intellect, the other insults it? Opinion only, of course.
Philosopher: I can tell you how I think.
Psychologist: I can tell you how you think. — Mww
Kant would never concede a relation between empirical neurological research and pure reason. At the same time, if he had any knowledge of empirical neurological research, it is unlikely he would have spent 12 years developing transcendental philosophy. Still, that particular bell can never be unrung. — Mww
True enough, and starting with the recognition of anthropomorphism. The bane of good philosophy, but conveniently overlooked in the other sciences. What warrant have we to classify the mental capacities of lesser animals, ref. Nagel, 1974. No matter what we think about how lesser animals process information, such thinking is only possible from the way we think about anything at all. It looks to us as if dolphins enjoy surfing, and it looks to us like eagles play catch with their catch. Might be nothing but another kind of observer problem.
You ask what if we let go of the assumption only higher intelligence animals synthesize information a priori; I say the strictly human criteria by which lesser animals synthesize information a priori, can never be met.
Still fun to talk about, though. As long as nobody claims to have all the answers. — Mww
Relation is a cognitive term, so relation only means anything when thought is involved. To ask whether things relate when we don’t think abut them doesn’t make any sense. Best we can do is profess ignorance. — Mww
Kant’s aesthetics structures the capacity for what we feel to interact with our faculties of imagination and understanding without interference from judgement. — Possibility
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