I see no question. But I miss a lot things. The point is not that it works (i.e., Kant's account). He's not about saying what is or isn't. What he is about is giving an account for how it can be. If you read Kant, you will see that the questions he deals with are substantial. And he deals with them. And you've got it by the tail, although maybe you don't know it. I do not know if "perceive" as you use it above is the correct term. It implies you take in something that is outside of you, and the exteriority itself is the source of your knowledge.The question: — Arthur Rupel
In sum you take in things that at first are sensations (e.g., various frequencies of electromagnetic radiation). As such there's no sense to be made of them. But a part of your mind does exactly that. It constructs your reality. — tim wood
Time is change and change does exist in more than just the mind. The mind perceives change relative its own frequency of change which is why change can appear nonexistent in processes that are very slow (stable solid objects) compared to change that is so fast as to be just a blur or nonexistent to us.The thought is that this "waiting" period, which varies, implies something that is represented in our minds based on something outside our minds.
The thought is that "time" is not completely a mental creation but it is also representative of something outside of phenomena, an existent in noumena. In a sense, time is "real." — Arthur Rupel
In this Kantian pure reason sense, no. — tim wood
Thank you for the correction; points to you! This being TPF, however, I will not resist the impulse to quibble. The mind creates for you what you regard as reality. In that sense it is your reality, but not the reality. Point?Minds don't construct realities or worlds. They construct models, or representations. — Harry Hindu
Maybe everybody but me already knew this, but for me it's a new way of looking at it - and I really appreciate that!Even if solipsism were the case, a mind would not construct reality. Mind would BE reality. There would be no such thing as mind - only reality. — Harry Hindu
What a monster of labor it must have been for Kant to write his Critiques. The "as phenomena" makes all the difference, yet in what classroom or discussion did anyone (but you) ever get it right? Such qualifications, seemingly of little consequence, turn out to be lynch pins of understandings. Original sources! That way a person needs worry only about his or her own misreadings and not those that infest the secondary literature, and lectures given by those who didn't understand.but even space and time themselves disappear; and that these, as phenomena, cannot exist in themselves, — Mww
It would be a category error to call it your reality. You can call it your version of reality if "model" or "representation" isn't to your liking, but to call it "reality" would be incorrect.Thank you for the correction; points to you! This being TPF, however, I will not resist the impulse to quibble. The mind creates for you what you regard as reality. In that sense it is your reality, but not the reality. Point? — tim wood
It would be a category error to call it your reality. You can call it your version of reality if "model" or "representation" isn't to your liking, but to call it "reality" would be incorrect.
If you realize that your mind doesn't exhaust reality (realism) - that there are things your senses can't reach, or that you are wrong sometimes - reality is how things actually are and then our minds are how we interpret the version our senses provide in order to facilitate goal-oriented behavior.
If you realize that your mind exhausts reality (solipsism) then "mind" becomes incoherent and "reality" is the only term that applies to the situation. — Harry Hindu
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