What Willow was thinking is simple. He (or she) believes that some things are not logically possible because, when one tries to work them out (work out their implications), one finds that it is impossible for them to be worked out. This is similar to how Spinoza proceeds to justify his moves in his Ethics.Yeah, I don't know what the heck Willow was thinking on that one. — Terrapin Station
Then the onus is on you, or any other metaphysician, to prove how it might be possible. It's absurd to claim "Hurr Hurr it might be possible you know! >:) " without even being able to show how it might be possible. The proof is in the doing.Yeah I should have qualified that I meant 'logically incoherent to us'. It's always logically possible that something might not seem logically coherent, but be possible nonetheless. — John
Because some of them are wrong? Because metaphysics has political ramifications, and thus certain truths can't be recognised without thereby recognising their political implications?If metaphysics is a science, then why do all the metaphysicians disagree with one another? — John
No - because it's possible that the metaphysician is wrong, but this would have to be shown.Are you saying that if metaphysicians think something is impossible then it is impossible? — John
it's possible that the metaphysician is wrong, but this would have to be shown. — Agustino
This is still a metaphysical question.I don't think metaphysics can be an exact science, because its 'truths' cannot be intersubjectively confirmed or disconfirmed by observation. — John
Ehm... in what sense can Kant be confirmed by others as self-evident? And what does that have to do with his method?Only the kind of a priori analysis that Kant undertook may be confirmed by all as self-evident, but even here heaps of philosophers disagree. — John
This is still a metaphysical question. — Agustino
Ehm... in what sense can Kant be confirmed by others as self-evident? And what does that have to do with his method? — Agustino
No but it follows that if you're interested to talk about this, you should try to show why it isn't - or rather can't be - a science.So what? Even if that is so, it doesn't follow that metaphysics is a science? — John
Bullshit, address the specifics:He considered his method to be an a priori method. If this is true then his conclusions would be self-evidently true to all unbiased rational minds. I say "if this is true" because it is by no means uncontroversial. Think of Quine's rejection between the a priori/ a posteriori distinction, for example. Quine was an arch empiricist, though, so i obviously would not agree with him. It is this very possibility of genuine rational disagreement between thinkers that ensures that metaphysics cannot be a science. — John
Kant made a foundational assumption. That assumption is that the faculties participate in perception and give structure - or form - to the perceptions. We impose the forms on reality, not the other way around. Once that assumption is in place, of course everything runs smoothly. Just grant him that little (actually big) point. This was all of Kant's imaginative leap. Then he renders traditional metaphysics to result in antinomies - and no wonder! If we impose the forms on Reality, then we have access only to appearances and not to things-in-themselves. And hence when we try to reach things-in-themselves we reach the antinomies. Woah! What a grand discovery! >:O You put the rabbit in the hat, and you take the rabbit out. It's simple. The rest of Kant is the working out of the logical implications of his central thought. But has Kant ever asked himself, perhaps by chance, what happens if our faculties are not, in fact, the source of the forms of space, time, causality and the rest? What then? — Agustino
Not in the sense that I am an actor when I hit a billiard ball and it moves a certain way.What you are describing understands God to be an existing actor. — TheWillowOfDarkness
As I said, God is a way of relating to the world. You put God as just some other thing standing besides the world.The existing actor, all powerful and amazing, literally does the impossible, performs the action the world could never do itself. — TheWillowOfDarkness
You're not saying anything different - just using a different word for it. You're relating to it in a different way. Furthermore, by saying that, you're missing something. When the general says that, it's not his hubris that has defeated him. That's not what he's saying, I was too careless/arrogant and therefore I lost. He's saying I couldn't have done anything to win. Winning just wasn't in the cards. I did my best, but my best wasn't sufficient. I executed the best strategy I could, and I executed it in the best way I could. Still not enough.God didn’t ruin the general. The world did. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Nietzsche would have preferred that God wasn't dead. His whole secret ambition was always to revive God. The fact that God was dead was a problem for him - a problem to be solved, to be overcome.Nietzsche only left God somewhat dead. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I think he did. The idea of unity and expectation of unity (sub specie durationis) is anti-thetical to the idea of God.While he identified separation, killing the idea of unity, he did not escape the expectation of unity. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Yes, those who seek to level down the world - they still think it can be unified within history. Those who seek to maintain the tensions of the world, understand, as Augustine did in his City of God for example, that the end of history isn't within history. Kant, and all the moderns misunderstood this. Especially Marx and Hegel.The only question is whether one realises that or is still deluded into thinking the world can be unified. — TheWillowOfDarkness
But you don't understand my point. My point is precisely this, that the world isn't immune to destruction and change, and can't be immune to them, and the more we seek to actualise those things in history, the farther we get from them. And Nietzsche understood this too. This is trying to bring the end of history - which is a SPIRITUAL happening - into empirical, physical history.The crisis of Nihilism is the failure to accept this, a pining for the predetermined world immune to destruction and change. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I agree. And Nietzsche does too. And perhaps Plato has foreseen this waaaaay before anyone else ;)We might say the crisis of Nihilism is the belief and goal of the unified world. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Nietzsche would have preferred that God wasn't dead. His whole secret ambition was always to revive God. The fact that God was dead was a problem for him - a problem to be solved, to be overcome. — Agustino
But you don't understand my point. My point is precisely this, that the world isn't immune to destruction and change, and can't be immune to them, and the more we seek to actualise those things in history, the farther we get from them. And Nietzsche understood this too. — Agustino
When the general says that, it's not his hubris that has defeated him. — Agustino
No but it follows that if you're interested to talk about this, you should try to show why it isn't - or rather can't be - a science. — Agustino
That presumes that empirical confirmation is required for intersubjective consensus. Do you have empirical confirmation for the meaning of the look a girl gives you?! :-* And yet there seems to be intersubjective consensus between you two... Let me be a good Kantian as you like, and ask a great question! How is intersubjective consensus at all possible?Philosophical ideas cannot be empirically confirmed or disconfirmed, and thus no intersubjective consensus is possible. — John
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