"The hydrogen atom has one proton and one electron." — Herg
All of this is loaded with the mental. We have the idea of a rock. We have proper names that exist within an historical context. — macrosoft
So when we say something about the mind-independent world, we're not saying that we're not thinking about it, that we don't have concepts about it, that we're not using language, etc. But that's not what the claim is about. The claim is about the mind-independent world. Not about our concepts.
This is like another mental defect--an inability to understand the notion of aboutness, so that you conflate tools with what the tools are working on. — Terrapin Station
As I've said, the real value of this is to reveal a certain aporia from taking either perspective as absolute — macrosoft
You're off the tracks here already. What in the world is this sentence even saying? What in the world does it have to do with anything we were just talking about? — Terrapin Station
The idea of the real world exists within an individual skull. — macrosoft
The 'real world' is an idea. — macrosoft
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/kant-metaphysics/#TheReaTraIllThe absolutely “unconditioned,” regardless of the fact that it presents to reason as objective, is not an object or state of affairs that could be captured in any possible human experience. In emphasizing this last point, Kant identifies metaphysics with an effort to acquire knowledge of “objects” conceived, but in no wise given (or giveable) to us in experience. In its efforts to bring knowledge to completion, that is, reason posits certain ideas, the “soul,” the “world” and “God.” Each of these ideas represents reason’s efforts to think the unconditioned in relation to various sets of objects that are experienced by us as conditioned.
It is this general theory of reason, as a capacity to think (by means of “ideas”) beyond all standards of sense, and as carrying with it a unique and unavoidable demand for the unconditioned, that frames the Kantian rejection of metaphysics. At the heart of that rejection is the view that although reason is unavoidably motivated to seek the unconditioned, its theoretical efforts to achieve it are inevitably sterile. The ideas which might secure such unconditioned knowledge lack objective reality (refer to no object), and our misguided efforts to acquire ultimate metaphysical knowledge are led astray by the illusion which, according to Kant, “unceasingly mocks and torments us”. — SEP
No, it isn't. And that's such a simple mistake that it's ridiculous. The IDEA of the real world is an idea. The real world isn't itself an idea. — Terrapin Station
The patterns of paints on a canvas are a pattern of paints. That doesn't mean that the patterns of paints are only OF a pattern of paints. — Terrapin Station
The absolutely “unconditioned,” regardless of the fact that it presents to reason as objective, is not an object or state of affairs that could be captured in any possible human experience. — SEP
air-gapped — macrosoft
Presumably you think that the brain synthesizes sensation into an indirect image of the world. — macrosoft
(Maybe Kant presented an argument for it in CPR or wherever, but I don't recall that if so. It's been a long time since I read much Kant . . I don't even recall what the heck the conditioned/unconditioned distinction is supposed to be) — Terrapin Station
To ignore that physics is grounded in a wider context that makes it intelligible is tempting but misleading, I think. — macrosoft
If we evolved as mainstream science has it (and I don't doubt that we did), then our cognition would be one more tool, shaped so that we perceive what is relevant to our survival and reproduction. — macrosoft
The kind of truth independent of human purposes — macrosoft
We don't see our seeing of the tree. We just see the tree. — macrosoft
You seem to be reasoning as follows:
Premise: Physics is only intelligible in a wider context.
Inference: If the wider context is not present, what physics is describing cannot exist.
That is an invalid argument.
This, by contrast, would be a valid argument:
Premise: Physics is only intelligible in a wider context.
Inference: If the wider context is not present, physics is unintelligible. — Herg
Exactly. Again, it's a conflation of how we know about things, what we understand, etc. with what our knowing, etc. are about. — Terrapin Station
And macrosoft's statement ("There is a big statue of Lincoln in DC") and mine ("The hydrogen atom has one proton and one electron") are not on a par. The statue, Lincoln, and DC are all external mind-independent objects, but describing them as a statue, Lincoln and DC requires knowledge of a particular culture and is therefore mind-dependent. My sentence about the hydrogen atom requires no knowledge of a particular culture, only knowledge of the structure of matter, which is not culture-dependent, and therefore not mind-dependent (unless one is an idealist, which macrosoft claims not to be). — Herg
Just in case our cognition was shaped so that we perceive what is relevant to our survival and reproduction, then a Kantian view is implied because ? — Terrapin Station
It's not just a matter of style to say that we're "seeing our seeing." That's a claim that would require some sort of support beyond simply making the claim. — Terrapin Station
All ideas exist within individual skulls, so this isn't saying anything. It's like saying, "patterns of paints exist on individual canvases." Yeah, obviously. — Terrapin Station
That obviousness is actually what deserves being challenged, — macrosoft
'd say just look at the well-worn pragmatist critique of differences that make no difference. I agree that 'just seeing the tree' and 'only seeing or seeing of the tree' do have different meaning-content in the heads of those debating, but these differences are trivial. They act pretty much the same in the real world that grounds all our talking. — macrosoft
Our cognition mediates or distorts the object. — macrosoft
Does a bat see the world as a human does? Does a 5 year old boy see the world as 50 year old man does? Of course not. — macrosoft
You haven't addressed what kind of thing you are fundamentally up to (which I did not ask directly.) What is philosophy for? — macrosoft
Science and philosophy are mostly looking at the same things, just with different methodological approaches and slightly different focuses.
Science is experiment-oriented, focused on theorizing and proposing hypotheses that we then attempt to falsify via empirical experiments (whereupon, in lieu of falsification, we consider the hypotheses provisionally verified, at least so long as the experiment was well-designed).
Philosophy is not experiment-oriented. It's more focused on critically examining assumptions that we make [including assumptions that both itself and the sciences make about the world and how it can be examined], as well as trying to describe, account for and occasionally prescribe things about the world based on abstract structural relations. — Terrapin Station
And macrosoft's statement ("There is a big statue of Lincoln in DC") and mine ("The hydrogen atom has one proton and one electron") are not on a par. The statue, Lincoln, and DC are all external mind-independent objects, but describing them as a statue, Lincoln and DC requires knowledge of a particular culture and is therefore mind-dependent. My sentence about the hydrogen atom requires no knowledge of a particular culture, only knowledge of the structure of matter, which is not culture-dependent, and therefore not mind-dependent (unless one is an idealist, which macrosoft claims not to be). — Herg
The differences are trivial to whom? We need to ask individual people whether they matter to them, don't we? Importance, mattering, etc. are to individuals, and different individuals feel different ways. — Terrapin Station
That's a claim. What's the support for it? — Terrapin Station
A challenge from language fails from the get-go, because the topic isn't language.Language is simply the means via which we're communicating, but it's not the topic, and if you think it's the topic, you're supremely confused. — Terrapin Station
they're going to see the Lincoln statue and the hydrogen atom similarly in that regard — Terrapin Station
You try to give them directions to the store to buy milk, but they can't do that, because all they can do is count how many miles it was to the store, how many light posts they passed, how many other cars were on the road, how many cartons of milk there were, etc.--all they can do is count things, all they can do is engage an obsession. — Terrapin Station
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