Paine
Per Kant, we don't learn about space and time a posteriori. — frank
He's just saying that consciousness of my own existence requires something to compare and contrast with me. The use of dialectics runs through the CPR. This is a case of that. — frank
frank
Per Kant, we don't learn about space and time a posteriori.
— frank
That is a more of an argument toward accepting an "ontological" limit than saying: — Paine
The Refutation of Idealism section previously linked to argues against the "any difference will do" idea. — Paine
Paine
frank
Since the intuitions are separated from the processes of reason a priori, differences of experience are neither what Descartes nor Berkeley described, as outlined in Kant's Refutation of Idealism.
That approach is different from observing there are "differences" of experience that provide a context for a subject as presented in Descartes and Berkeley. It is on the same grounds that Kant resisted Hume describing causality as only a story that is told. — Paine
In Kant’s conception, by contrast, accounting for our sense of the identity of the conscious subject of different self-attributions requires that this subject be distinct from its representations. — SEP
Paine
The mere, but empirically determined, consciousness of my own
existence proves the existence of objects in space outside me. — Critique of Pure Reason, B275
Paine
frank
I am trying to avoid being cryptic by referencing specific portions of the actual text. I was sincere in my general thumbnail that you asked for. But that generality is cryptic as all general descriptions tend to be. That is why I was so reluctant to offer it.
I am doing the best that I can as I understand effort. — Paine
frank
I have a much broader outlook. — frank
Paine
You, on the other hand, take a bit of text and use it as the basis for what ends up being self reflection. You want every philosopher to be something like a materialist, and you take one word and draw out a materialist outlook. — frank
frank
Ludwig V
You are right. That remark is more complicated than it seems. It is true that to seek to disprove everybody else's solipsism is something that only a non-solipsist would want to do. That's why the addition that you can't disprove it to your self is such a surprise.Searle's tongue was in his cheek: whoever "disproves everybody else's solipsism" presupposes that s/he is not a solipsist. — 180 Proof
It depends on what you are paying attention to. As long as you are immersed in your dream, there is no way to understand that it is a dream. It is only after you wake up that you can appreciate a wider context, extract yourself from your immersion, and realize the wider world that shows that it was a dream.There really is no way of knowing whether or not you are just a product of my imagination.. — ProtagoranSocratist
For Kant, in his time, the statement that awareness of self required the existence of "exterior" things was his argument against solipsism. — Paine
Mww
For Kant, in his time, the statement that awareness of self required the existence of "exterior" things was his argument against solipsism. — Paine
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