*Feuerbach pays quite a bit of attention to this issue. The Incarnation is a symbol confession for him that (the hu-)man is the God or supreme value for (the hu-)man. — ff0
People have a problem with Kant because they don't understand him. — tim wood
They suppose he's saying you cannot know anything about the world because of the idea of noumena, and how can he then talk about knowing the world if he's already argued that it cannot be known. — tim wood
The other kind is practical knowledge, which is not so constrained. Never for a moment does he doubt that - or argue against - the tree is a tree, or that it is as it appears. From the standpoint of science, Gewissenschaft, he requires that science give a scientific account of the tree as tree, not as a pratical matter, but as a scientific matter. And he finds that science, because it works from perception/appearances, cannot. — tim wood
Maybe here I can open the clam. I can observe/perceive - see - the tree only in so far as I can see it. If it has an ultraviolet or infrared "signature," I won't see it. — tim wood
And to be sure, what I do see is just my seeing of it. — tim wood
It seems to me an unwarranted assumption that my seeing somehow is the same as the thing itself. — tim wood
As a scientific matter, concerning the tree as it really is in itself, then I don't. — tim wood
But is the tree really green? — tim wood
The consciousness of the divine love, or what is the same thing, the contemplation of God as human, is the mystery of the Incarnation. The Incarnation is nothing else than the practical, material manifestation of the human nature of God. God did not become man for his own sake; the need, the want of man – a want which still exists in the religious sentiment – was the cause of the Incarnation. God became man out of mercy: thus he was in himself already a human God before he became an actual man; for human want, human misery, went to his heart. The Incarnation was a tear of the divine compassion, and hence it was only the visible advent of a Being having human feelings, and therefore essentially human.
If in the Incarnation we stop short at the fact of God becoming man, it certainly appears a surprising inexplicable, marvellous event. But the incarnate God is only the apparent manifestation of deified man; for the descent of God to man is necessarily preceded by the exaltation of man to God. Man was already in God, was already God himself, before God became man, i.e., showed himself as man.
...
That which is mysterious and incomprehensible, i.e., contradictory, in the proposition, “God is or becomes a man,” arises only from the mingling or confusion of the idea or definitions of the universal, unlimited, metaphysical being with the idea of the religious God, i.e., the conditions of the understanding, with the conditions of the heart, the emotive nature; a confusion which is the greatest hindrance to the correct knowledge of religion.
— Feuerbach
Hail to thee, blithe Spirit!
Bird thou never wert,
That from Heaven, or near it,
Pourest thy full heart
In profuse strains of unpremeditated art.
I am not sure how you got that out of what I said. I think that we can hear the joy in the song of birds, they are not reflectively aware, they simply are. Shelley kinda nailed it. — Cavacava
I don't know, but that won't stop me! We're using seeing as a metaphor for all perceiving. I see the tree. Clearly there are parts of the tree I cannot see, and for a variety of reasons. Some aren't visible from where I am. Some parts, like the inside of the tree, are never visible while the tree is standing. The roots. It's appearance under light I cannot see. It's acoustic structure. It's cellular structure. In this season I cannot see how it is in another season. And so on. In sum, perception is always deficient with respect to what is there."What would "exactly accurate" refer to? What does it mean to have an "exactly accurate" image to a thing itself?" In other words, what would need to be possible for this obtain? — numberjohnny5
Are you arguing that the appearance of things is how they really are? Can you think of anything at all that you're willing to say is identical to your perception of it? Two problems: 1) perception is always deficient, never complete (that it may be complete with respect to some criteria is not to the point, here), and 2) perception is always through a set of filters, that you call our mental apparatus: therefore and thereby, the perception is filtered.Here Kant is assuming that the appearance of things IS distinct from how things really are. I don't think he has any good reasons to support that view though. — numberjohnny5
We're using seeing as a metaphor for all perceiving. — tim wood
In sum, perception is always deficient with respect to what is there. — tim wood
Are you arguing that the appearance of things is how they really are? — tim wood
Can you think of anything at all that you're willing to say is identical to your perception of it? — tim wood
Two problems: 1) perception is always deficient, never complete (that it may be complete with respect to some criteria is not to the point, here), and 2) perception is always through a set of filters, that you call our mental apparatus: therefore and thereby, the perception is filtered. — tim wood
More to the point, we can all agree the tree is green, and a scientist can give an account for how green works. But at its core this is just a consensus and a naming. But there is never anything that says that your experience of green just is, or is like, my experience of green. This surfaces where people disagree about their likes and dislikes. — tim wood
Your argument that both practical and scientific knowledge are equal as products of indirect realism is challenging, until one recognizes that the language is off. — tim wood
We do agree on the practical aspect of things. Green is green. The tree is a tree. To me this just means that the world's work can get done, and that the work is done within and with respect to appropriate parameters. — tim wood
Part of the reason is that often enough we find that how things appear, isn't really how they are. — tim wood
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