You seem to be doing it again where you’re interpreting the act of eating under a materialist ontology, and so I assume accusing idealism of entailing that we swallow and digest experiences with our mind-independent physical bodies.
Of course the problem here is you trying to mix materialism and idealism together. So stop doing that as it’s ridiculous. There’s just the experience of eating an orange, and like with a painting or a dream we can separate it out and say “this part is the orange and that part is my mouth”. — Michael
Meaning is merely a product of reason and in no way is a property of that which reason examines. — Mww
The problem with this for S's view is that S claims that meaning would exist if no people existed. — Terrapin Station
Fear just is the experience and an orange just is the experience. — Michael
Ignoring it then leaves one with rationality in general and humanity in particular irreducible to a non-contradictory fundamental condition, because the only other possible methodology, empirical science, cannot provide one. — Mww
When I use "people" or "person" I'm actually thinking "creature, or just simply entity, with a mind." So not necessarily a human. Not necessarily something on Earth, etc. — Terrapin Station
Kant also acknowledges the theory is quite incomprehensible to those who do not wish to understand it. — Mww
People ordinarily talk in this way, and you seem to be having problems with that and blaming it on what you take to be my realist assumptions. It is perfectly normal to eat an orange, and to say that a minute ago, I ate an orange. It is perfectly normal to ask you what an orange is. And that will have logical implications, whether you like it or not. If an orange is a fruit, then I ate a fruit. If an orange is an object, then I ate an object. And if an orange is a part of my experience, then I ate a part of my experience. — S
So there is no such thing as anything. Just the experience of all these "things" that don't exist? — ZhouBoTong
OK, but doesn't the same as what you say here apply to speaking of 'things in themselves'? — Janus
the difference between the in-itself and the for-itself is already present in the very fact that consciousness knows an object at all. Something is to it the in-itself, but the knowledge or the being of the object for consciousness is to it still another moment. — Hegel PoS
I can excuse Kant for this because it seems natural to think that anything that appears to us must also exist "in itself" in some unknowable way. — Janus
Is that a predictive ad-hom by Kant? — ZhouBoTong
Doesn't idealism (...) reduce to "it's all in your head" or at least "it wouldn't exist without your head"? — ZhouBoTong
Kant draws a line in the sand and tells us it's impossible to cross because he's seen the other side! — Theorem
Hegel pointed out the distinction between phenomenon and noumenon is itself a distinction of the understanding (otherwise it would be unthinkable) and, as such, the noumenon must logically be "inside the box", along with everything else that is thinkable. — Theorem
I don't think it's really that natural. It's certainly not how most ordinary people seem to think about it. Ancient and medieval philosophers didn't either (with a very few exceptions), nor did many who came after Kant. — Theorem
If idealism is true and an orange is just part of one's experience then eating is also just part of one's experience. You can talk normally and describe this as eating an orange... — Michael
The orange that you experience is just an experience... — Michael
This isn't some "elaborate" attempt to make sense of idealism. It's pretty straightforward. — Michael
So there is no such thing as anything. Just the experience of all these "things" that don't exist?
— ZhouBoTong
My happiness exists. My tiredness exists. The smörgåsbord of shapes and colours and tastes and smells that are my experience of eating an orange exists. So I don't know why you would suggest that idealism entails that things don't exist. — Michael
All you gotta grasp is, any attempt to think up conditions without thinking beings, is doomed to failure. — Mww
It is impossible to think of situations without thinkers because of the absolute necessity of the incidence of the one thinking it up. — Mww
That's not how I interpret it. "Kant draws a line in the sand and tells us it's impossible to cross because" it's impossible in principle to see the other side. — Janus
Again, I see this differently. Of course the distinction between phenomenon and noumenon is "inside the box"; along with everything else that is thinkable, and that is Kant's very point. The only difference with Hegel is that he doesn't want anything to be outside the box ( "The Rational is the Real"), and that is why he is referred to as an "Absolute Idealist". — Janus
The human mind in all cultures has grappled with the question of what the ultimate or absolute nature of things is. — Janus
In the East it had been long acknowledged that the absolute cannot be known by means of rational thought. — Janus
at least by means of rational thought, and I don't think Kant understood faith to be a form of knowing). — Janus
What I am arguing is that Kant's claims about the noumena - namely, that they exist and that they are the cause of phenomena - is analogous to drawing on the unknowable side of the page. — Theorem
And yet Kant crosses it by conceptualizing and talking about noumena and setting them into causal relation with phenomena. — Theorem
In other words, Kant's own theory of transcendental subjectivity implies that his theory of transcendental subjectivity is unknowable. The transcendental subject is itself a noumenon. — Theorem
The human mind in all cultures has grappled with the question of what the ultimate or absolute nature of things is. — Janus
I don't deny this.
In the East it had been long acknowledged that the absolute cannot be known by means of rational thought. — Janus
Yes, I'll grant that mysticism has a long pedigree in both the eastern and western traditions. — Theorem
Obviously, I don't agree with your interpretation of Kant, but there is no point wasting time and energy repeating myself. — Janus
Of course, the philosophers after all of that, around the time of the linguistic turn, also had relevant points to make: G. E. Moore, Russell, Wittgenstein. — S
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