[3] Can we see a suitable portion of the world as it is described truly?
...
Answer: [3] ... reject [4] and [5] for the same reasons as [1] — bongo fury
So if there aren't any creatures about, there isn't a way things are? — Daemon
A concrete object is what any human being knows. If you take a billionaire from New York and a priest from New Guinea, they have the same understanding of concrete objects that everyone else has! What we call reality is what presents itself to human beings. — Rafaella Leon
This is one of Kant’s mistakes, he thinks that all of these are limitations of our knowledge, that we cannot know things in themselves, however, I assert that what I’m talking about is things in themselves! — Rafaella Leon
If you take a billionaire from New York and a priest from New Guinea, they have the same understanding of concrete objects that everyone else has! — Rafaella Leon
Besides, Kant is wrong. I know this, because I’m a naive realist! — Wayfarer
I often say the whole point of philosophy is learning to look at your spectacles, instead of, or as well as, only looking through them. — Wayfarer
↪Daemon
There are things we don't know that we don't know, therefore we don't know anything. — Banno
reality is exactly what we perceive......
Agreed.
......“Ah, but it is always incomplete”.....
Correct. We never perceive everything possible to perceive.
.......tell me the idea of a complete reality that can be presentable to anyone. You cannot.....
Correct. The idea of a complete reality is given by itself, but that the object given by the idea is therefore presentable in its entirety, does not follow from its mere conception.
........showing itself only in certain aspects is proper to all reality, that is the structure of reality.....
Ehhhh.....error of equivocation: for reality to show itself implies intention, which cannot belong to entities having no conception of purpose. Negating the error then leaves the structure of reality undefined.
......Things that present themselves in all their aspects at the same time only exist ideally.....
That which is ideal does have all its aspects present in itself simultaneously, but cannot be a thing that presents itself as existing. The two familiar ideal conceptions, complete in themselves, are space and time, which do not exist in themselves but are merely sound logical conclusions.
.....the ideal cube that you draw on the paper shows six sides.....
No, it does not. It is possible to illustrate a three dimensional object on a two dimensional plane, but an ideal can never be a mere illustrated replica of an object in general.
.......So only this non-existent cube has six sides at the same time.....
No it does not. It is first a contradiction, insofar as non-existence has no extent in space nor duration in time, and second, cutting of the paper makes explicit the third dimension is in the construction of the cube, not the drawing of it.
.......That aspect of the cube that I perceive is the aspect that the cube can show me. It cannot show that same aspect of itself to an earthworm.....
Categorical errors of relation and modality: it is absurd to suppose an object common to differing perceptive physiologies or cognitive sophistication, changes itself in accordance with the system examining it. It is pathologically stupid to then suppose any one cognitive system has the apodeictic means to relate itself to another system diametrically opposed to it. It follows that, e.g, claiming an earthworm sees a cube, is unintelligible (relation), from which follows the claim that the cube presents itself, is empty (modality).
.....Only a human being can see this. Another animal will see it in yet another way.....
To see “this” or to see “it (this) in a different way” is a strictly human qualitative distinction, which suggests it is the capacities of the receiver of the impression, rather than the source of the impression, which generally determines various effects from common cause, but without any sense at all, of what the effects actually are. To claim an earthworm does not perceive as we perceive, is tautologically true, for the simple reason its negation is impossible. Hence, expositions on it are superfluous.
.......This is one of Kant’s mistakes, he thinks that all of these are limitations of our knowledge — Rafaella Leon
↪Daemon
There are aspects of the world that are inaccessible, but none of those are non-relational. It's just that we don't possess the right properties to enter into relation with those inaccessible aspects. There are no non-relational aspects in other words; if something were entirely non-relational it would be nothing at all. — Janus
Where did you get that pronunciation from Olivier? — Daemon
New York. It’s meant as a parody of a smart ass talking. — Olivier5
IOW we don't know everything about the world if there are things we don't know. Or universe, really, presumably. Or are you asserting we know nothing about the world?There are things we don't know that we don't know, and they are part of the world as it is, so we don't know the world as it is. — Daemon
The tetrachromats are interesting because it means all men and most women are colour-blind. So if you've ever wondered what it's like to be colour-blind, now you know. — Daemon
Andrew then added something about "standards", Platonic or Idealised standards, versus creature specific standards.
I guess "Idealised" is the same thing as "the world as it is ("in itself"). — Daemon
That sums up the philosophical dispute. Is "the world as it is" that which human beings ordinarily perceive when not mistaken (i.e., per a human standard)? Or is it an ideal that transcends human perception? — Andrew M
I was saying that I think the notion of a non-relational aspect of the world is incoherent. — Janus
How do you identify what is entering into relation with what? Those two asteroids are where they are because of Jupiter's gravitational effect, Jupiter is where it is because of the sun, and the Milky Way galaxy.
Does "everything is relational" get us anywhere? — Daemon
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