That being said, if the "Platonic" viewpoint eventually floats off into the aether, then the Aristotelian viewpoint seems to eat itself alive, so to speak. This is Kant's whole schtick; how do you derive things from your senses without some means of deriving them given independently? There are answers to this argument, of course, but I'll stop there for now. — Pneumenon
I was responding more to the Humean point raised by Sap. We derive ideas from impressions - where do we learn how to do that? — Pneumenon
I didn't say that Hume's theory of perception - more specifically, The Copy Principle - is without shortcomings, but rather that it's more convincing than Plato's theory of Forms. — Sapientia
Does it in some way that has escaped me imply that there are independent Forms of which objects in the real world are derived? — Sapientia
What Hume's CP misses is that impressions are always-already structured by the mind, and hence there is no deriving of the idea of the chair by seeing a chair, simply because in order to see a chair, one must already have the idea (that which, in the mind, structures the perception to be a perception of a chair, as opposed to some nonsensical perception of a "blur"). — Agustino
If the perception of objects requires the mind to have a structure/faculty which already contains the idea of objects in it a priori, then it follows that the idea is ontologically prior to the object, empirically speaking, for there simply cannot be an object without the idea of it - and so it is not Plato and/or Aristotle that got it backwards. ;) — Agustino
How does this relate back to my comment? I didn't say that Hume's theory of perception - more specifically, The Copy Principle - is without shortcomings, but rather that it's more convincing than Plato's theory of Forms. I don't go as far as Hume in all things, and I think that Kant made some very good points in response to him.
In answer to your question, we have an inbuilt capacity which has such a function. But what do you think that this says about Plato's theory of Forms, if anything? Does it in some way that has escaped me imply that there are independent Forms of which objects in the real world are derived? I still think that he basically got it backwards. — Sapientia
Not at all. Awareness of an idea does not mean production of an idea. An idea can and does exist prior to your awareness of it. The idea of a chair is what makes it possible for you to experience the sight of a chair. But then, contra Hume, the sight of the chair does not PRODUCE the idea - rather the sight of the chair is required for you to come to KNOW that you have such and such an idea. Point is that the idea makes the experience possible, and the experience makes you aware of the existence of the idea. Similarly, light makes sight possible (no light, no sight), but sight makes one aware of the existence of light (no sight does NOT mean no light exists - only that one can't be aware of its existence). So just like light comes prior to sight (as it is its ground of possibility), but is nevertheless necessarily known only through sight, so too the idea comes prior to experience (ontologically), but it is known only through experience.If you have it both ways, then you'd be equivocating, since you'd be calling some mental function involved in the production of an idea an "idea", in addition to the idea itself. So the idea would be produced by the idea, which is a needlessly muddled way of speaking. — Sapientia
Clearly :DAlso, I don't really get what you're going on about. — Sapientia
Impressions are structured by the mind through the ideas. We become aware of ideas through perception. Ideas exist prior to perception, even if we may be unaware of their existence - they are what make perception possible in the first place.You seem to contradict yourself when you say that impressions are "always-already" structured by the mind, so the idea isn't derived from the perception, and then that we have an ability which structures perceptions to form ideas. — Sapientia
They are always-already structured because all experience is mediated through the ideas - there can be no experience otherwise.How can they be "always-already" structured, yet require structuring? — Sapientia
You cannot have the impressions without the idea.We derive the idea of a gold mountain from the necessary simple impressions, such as that of gold, and these are in turn a result of having had a certain perception (or perceptions); — Sapientia
Explain. How can I see a chair if my mind does not individuate a smaller set of impressions from the much larger set of impressions currently available - thus making possible the experience of a chair as opposed to the experience of "patches of color"? And how can it individuate it except through the idea?The mind doesn't contain the idea of objects in it a priori, nor is that necessary to perceive objects. — Sapientia
Impressions are structured by the mind through the ideas. We become aware of ideas through perception. Ideas exist prior to perception, even if we may be unaware of their existence - they are what make perception possible in the first place. — Agustino
Explain. How can I see a chair if my mind does not individuate a smaller set of impressions from the much larger set of impressions currently available - thus making possible the experience of a chair as opposed to the experience of "patches of color"? And how can it individuate it except through the idea? — Agustino
I am not convinced of the truth of idealism, but Schopenhauer's logic seems quite good. We come to know of the world through perception. Indeed it is through perception that we come to KNOW of the ideas of reality, existence, external world, etc. All our concepts are derived from perception. And so, you cannot speak of something that cannot be percieved even in principle (even cells can be percieved using microscopes! - electrons using beams of photons, etc.) as existing - because to exist is to be percieved. And hence, when you tell me that ideas don't exist - that is nonsense. If ideas don't exist, then nothing does either. So I agree that ideas are as they are regardless of our awareness of them, but I disagree that they do not exist. Plato's forms are in no way like existing things, the same way the idea of a circle, is in no way like a real circle - as Spinoza showed.More like ideas (meaning) are so regardless of perception (and existing states) and they do not exist. Plato's forms - that which is like existing things but never them- are sort of an allusion to this, only he mistakes them as a foundation for existing things when they are just infinite meanings. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Nope, I don't believe this. Ideas are on a different, but ontologically prior level to actual states of existence. And if Idealism is true, then ideas are all that exists. If materialism is true, then ideas form the structure of our minds only, and all our experience is mediated and converted through these structures. The material worlds becomes Kant's noumenon, the one we can never know of. That's why Schopenhauer affirming the possibility of knowledge of the noumenon necessarily implied idealism, which I tend to think is the better explanation, but I may be wrong on this point. I am not at all certain of the truth of idealism.Your notion that ideas are the foundation of states of existence is basically a carbon copy of Plato's forms. — TheWillowOfDarkness
No I merely say that the existence of actual triangles, perceptible triangles, requires the existence of the imperceptible idea of triangles. Even this is far-fetched. It's much better to say that the existence of spatial objects requires the imperceptible existence of the idea of space.You say there is an meaning, say triangle, from which all existing triangles are derived. — TheWillowOfDarkness
False. To recognize a chair, I need to separate it from the rest of the environment, which is also in my visual field. What performs this separation? Why don't I just see a mess of colors, with no logic behind them?When you recognise a chair, your mind has not done individuating form a larger set of impressions. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Yes it is. Certain structures are required for perception to be at all possible, as Kant clearly and irrefutably (by the way) demonstrated. This is one of the things he got right, and I do disagree with Kant on quite a few points. But not this insight.Something "making it possible" is incoherent. You seeing the chair was merely possible by definition (you might look at a chair and have the idea of chair) and it happened (you had the idea of chair while looking at a chair). — TheWillowOfDarkness
Yes it is. Certain structures are required for perception to be at all possible, as Kant clearly and irrefutably (by the way) demonstrated. This is one of the things he got right, and I do disagree with Kant on quite a few points. But not this insight. — Agustino
I would largely agree to this. Socrates in my opinion is superior, as a human being, compared to Plato and Aristotle.Aristotle has never given me 'the fire.' What I get out of Plato I mostly get from the extent to which he is trying to portray Socrates, who from this imperfect reflection seems like by far the more compelling thinker. To the extent that Plato departs form the 'historical' Socrates, he becomes less interesting.
Overall I would say I hold the Socratic tradition and the 'ethical turn' in the highest regard, and that this is distinct from the not so great directions that Plato and Aristotle took him in. I see the Hellenistic philosophers as the heirs to this more interesting tradition, which is sort of 'ethicist' rather than empiricist or rationalist. — The Great Whatever
My point is that, if we have some inborn capacity that allows us to derive ideas from impressions, then we've gotten into inborn capacities, a priori knowledge (at least in terms of "knowing-how"), and so on, which gives "Platonic" thinking a foothold of some sort. — Pneumenon
That being said, if you would like to narrow the scope and start in on the "What does it mean for us to have built-in faculties for shaping perceptions?" question, then I'd be happy to do that. — Pneumenon
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