So, if knowing is not a species of belief in this view, what is it? It is what Aristotle described in De Anima iii -- the actualization of intelligibility -- or, in more phenomenological terms, the awareness of present being. — Dfpolis
His awareness of this dynamic presence, of this intelligibility, was him knowing that he was in his chamber, and it was unaffected by his suspension of belief. — Dfpolis
Was he suspending belief or modulating attention (concentrated direction of mind by means of information selection)? — Galuchat
In Dennett's case, no mental experience may be a fact. — Galuchat
Descartes's knowledge was unaffected because all during his meditation, his chamber continued to project its reality into him -- it never ceased to act on him in sensible ways: scattering light into his eyes, pressing up on his bottom, holding his manuscript in place as he wrote. His awareness of this dynamic presence, of this intelligibility, was him knowing that he was in his chamber, and it was unaffected by his suspension of belief. — Dfpolis
What does he say, and what do you think, minds and experiences are? — Galuchat
Don't you think that Descartes's awareness was supported not by a simple physical presence of the things in his room, but also, more broadly, by rootedness of the things in the world? — Number2018
In other words while he continued to know that he was in his chamber, he chose not to believe it. — Dfpolis
Rather, it involved a willing suspension of belief, — Dfpolis
So, if knowing is not a species of belief in this view, what is it? It is what Aristotle described in De Anima iii -- the actualization of intelligibility -- or, in more phenomenological terms, the awareness of present being. — Dfpolis
Surely it's the other way around. He believed he was in his chamber. And what he felt he knew - by rational doubt - was that was just in fact a belief and no more. — apokrisis
So simple empiricism - the evidence of the senses - has a problem when it comes to being "knowledge". It is quite plausible that any sensory evidence is some kind of dream or illusion — apokrisis
Psychology already reveals that. — apokrisis
Rather, it involved a willing suspension of belief, — Dfpolis
Explicitly the opposite. Descartes had to posit a relentless evil demon as the reason why it was logically possible he could be deceived, despite his wishes otherwise. — apokrisis
Well "the awareness of present being" is a hopelessly ambiguous term here. — apokrisis
The correct answer in my view is the Pragmatic/Semiotic position taken by scientific reasoning. — apokrisis
This is good psychology. It is how brains function. Minds are pragmatic models of the world - a system of signs or an Unwelt, and not some kind of veridical direct representation as is usually naively presumed. — apokrisis
What we are in fact interested in - as modellers - is to reduce "the world" to an easily understood system of signs. — apokrisis
So knowledge becomes about certainty over our possible courses of action — apokrisis
So, I have chosen to define "knowing" to refer to the process Aristotle described in De Anima iii -- a usage with a long tradition of philosophical usage. To wit, to know is to actualize present intelligibility. It is thus an activity of intellect -- of our capacity for awareness of information. — Dfpolis
If that is how you conceive of knowledge, it does not exist. Our actual system of episteme and doxa is always limited -- always open to shocking surprise. Our ability to predict, while real, is limited and uncertain. Failing to see this is a very dangerous form of hubris. — Dfpolis
I would suggest that underlying this crisis in faith about our knowledge is the cultural shift from a theological perspective to a humanistic worldview. The Scholastics were quite content to acknowledge that human beings are finite creatures, with limited intellects. They did not think that we should know anything exhaustively, as God knows it. Rather, we know only what sense reveals to us. Still, we know what sense reveals to us. — Dfpolis
What we are interested in as humans is to know being as it reveals itself to us. To the extent that we can "model" it with a system of comprehensible signs, we make it easier to respond to. Still, to the extent that we confuse our models with reality, to the extent that we think our "reduced" world is the real world, we are guilty of Whiteheads Fallacy of Misplaced Concreteness. The real world is not our model and it is always ready to hit us with a shocking surprise to prove it isn't. — Dfpolis
So is the real debate about the accuracy of Aristotle's epistemology or the unreasonableness of Descartes's? — apokrisis
I think Aristotle's approach ... boils down quite nicely to a pragmatic and semiotic story. — apokrisis
I just see that he has a place in history as a particular reaction to the simplistic empiricism that characterised the dawning Enlightenment. — apokrisis
Knowledge develops by beginning from some "leap of faith" - a willingness to take one hypothesis as a plausible truth and then judge that based on its "real world" consequences. — apokrisis
pragmaticism is about accepting that absolute knowledge is never going to be the case, then moving on. — apokrisis
Pragmatism doesn't just acknowledge our finitude ... — apokrisis
In this light, knowledge is all about the development of those kinds of regulatory habits. — apokrisis
all sense data is simply acts of measurement. — apokrisis
Your scheme seems basically Cartesian in its dualism of mind and world — apokrisis
And the reason Aristotle would have seen the discursive intellect as somehow coming from somewhere beyond the embodied and sensing animal soul is that its form indeed does come from the "beyond" that is human cultural development, with the "self" and the "world" that emerges there. — apokrisis
I am stressing that the system of signs is Janus-like in that it encodes both "the real world" and "the real us". — apokrisis
my main point here is that what Aristotle meant by the "intellect" maps very nicely to what we would understand about the social evolution of the human mind. — apokrisis
I take it from this that you have not read De Anima iii. — Dfpolis
Descartes published his Meditations on First Philosophy in 1641 and died in 1650. He was part of the background out of which the Enlightenment developed. — Dfpolis
And I take it from this that you have not read what i wrote in my last post. — Dfpolis
You do realize that thoughts are not the same kind of signs as natural and artificial languages? — Dfpolis
Having read De Anima a number of times, i fail to see any evidence of this. Would you care to back this up with specific texts that support your point? — Dfpolis
I take it from this that you have not read De Anima iii. — Dfpolis
As if there were one reading of it. — apokrisis
You know that there are many contrasting readings on what was meant by the intellect and how it was embodied. — apokrisis
Descartes published his Meditations on First Philosophy in 1641 and died in 1650. He was part of the background out of which the Enlightenment developed. — Dfpolis
Oh please. As if Galileo or Francis Bacon did not yet exist. — apokrisis
And I take it from this that you have not read what i wrote in my last post. — Dfpolis
Is this going to be your standard response? Anyone who dares to disagree with you must be merely failed scholars. — apokrisis
You do realize that thoughts are not the same kind of signs as natural and artificial languages? — Dfpolis
But are thoughts things or processes? Are they the syntactical symbols, the mere marks, or the semantic acts of interpretation? — apokrisis
maybe you also want to say that thoughts can take mental images as their signs — apokrisis
my position being that all sense data are signs in a syntactic sense. — apokrisis
Some yes/no question is being answered about the "state of the world". — apokrisis
Would you care to back this up with specific texts that support your point? — Dfpolis
I made my argument. — apokrisis
Aristotle is remembered as the empirical antidote to Plato's rationalism - a proto-pragmatist — apokrisis
Yes, I think he distorted the trajectory of Western philosophy. — Dfpolis
As natural scientists we care about what Ptolemy, Galileo, Newton and Hubble saw, not their experience of being a knowing subject seeing it. As a result, the fundamental abstraction leaves behind data on subjectivity. Having projected such data out of its conceptual space, it can form no judgement linking what it knows of the objective world to concepts reflecting our subjective experience.
Dennett and his ilk seem blissfully unaware of the fundamental abstraction. So, finding no place for subjectivity in their conceptual space, they assume it does not exist. The correct response is to approach the problem in a way that does not leave data on the table. — Dfpolis
Could you expand on this a bit? — tim wood
What is it you'd like to recover from the "lost" subjective experience? I don't question its value; I rather don't know what the value is you have in mind. — tim wood
Is the knowledge of so-called "divine" knowledge the same knowledge I have when I know that it's raining? It seems to me it must be different - but where does that leave "knowledge"? — tim wood
Is this the "distortion of the trajectory?"After Descartes, philosophers turn their vision more and more from being, to the question of what, if anything, we know. — Dfpolis
It's exhausting to parse these things too closely, but sometimes we have to. I'm walking downtown and turn a corner and there's a horse! The recognition (and surprise) comes pretty quickly. But what has actually happened? My eyes gathered some peculiar light, my brain quickly connecting the gathered impressions with some pre-loaded ideas. The horse itself is only tangentially involved in the process. Knowledge so far seems just as you describe, an "actualization of a present intelligibility." But maybe it's not a horse. Maybe it's a picture or a man in a horse suit or just a mistake in perception. Now we're stuck on just what knowledge is. I buy your definition - I appreciate that you trouble to define your terms - but it apparently only holds in terms of the object so far as I can say, "I thought it was a horse." Hmmm. Knowledge as intracranial activity, or as a relation in and to the world?to know is to actualize present intelligibility. It is thus an activity of intellect -- of our capacity for awareness of information. — Dfpolis
After Descartes, philosophers turn their vision more and more from being, to the question of what, if anything, we know. — Dfpolis
Is this the "distortion of the trajectory?" — tim wood
But maybe it's not a horse. Maybe it's a picture or a man in a horse suit or just a mistake in perception. Now we're stuck on just what knowledge is. I buy your definition - I appreciate that you trouble to define your terms - but it apparently only holds in terms of the object so far as I can say, "I thought it was a horse." Hmmm. Knowledge as intracranial activity, or as a relation in and to the world? — tim wood
does knowledge become certainty? As a practical matter it "certainly" does. — tim wood
we still don't know what knowledge is except in terms of a functional definition — tim wood
Here I'm channeling the idea found in the quote that the "essence of truth is the truth of essence," together with its qualification that a criteriological standard for a thing is not what a thing is. — tim wood
I suspect he was driven to reflection by the tumult of his world. — tim wood
Most philosophers today understand that the course of investigation presented in the Meditations wasn't Descartes central focus, but rather just a preliminary investigation into the conditions of certainty wrt scientific knowledge. — gurugeorge
Still, the four rules in his Discourse on the Method of Rightly Conducting the Reason and Seeking for Truth in the Sciences pale in comparison with the elaborate account of the hypothetico-deductive method and the need for controlled experiments laid out in the scientific works Robert Grosseteste. — Dfpolis
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