I don't want to get into the issues re "explanations" again. — Terrapin Station
Personally, I don't think that Kant explains anything, by the way. — Terrapin Station
Ok, then those properties are what we are talking about, which include the object's location in space and time. Objects have other properties than just spatial-temporal locations. There is more to the world than just reference points.You had just written "A reference point is a location [in] space-time." And yes, that's correct. That's what I'm talking about. Spatio-temporal locations. (It's just that I'm stressing that properties are unique at each spatio-temporal location.) — Terrapin Station
At no point did I suggest our experiences are presumed. Instead, what I said is that YOU are presuming our experiential mode of being is capable of grasping ultimate reality. — Arne
Ok, then those properties are what we are talking about, which include the object's location in space and time. Objects have other properties than just spatial-temporal locations. — Harry Hindu
As I already said, I said nothing about ultimate reality. And the point of my experience remark is that what we mean by reality is what we experience. — Dfpolis
What exactly then is your position re Kant about what is inherent to the mind as laid out in Critique of Pure Reason? Is space and time at least partially constructed in the mind? Or are space and time inherent to the physical world ONLY? — Noah Te Stroete
That's not a reason to suppose that there's no real extension/extensional relations or motion/change. — Terrapin Station
There are properties that vary at different spatial-temporal locations but not all of them. Color and texture of the orange doesn't change as I move around it or if I were to move it relative to me. The location changes, but not the color or texture.Right, so the point is that properties of objects vary at different spatio-temporal locations, including spatio-temporal locations on/in/etc. the objects themselves — Terrapin Station
I guess. The way I interpret Kant is that the spatio-temporal reference points you were talking about as real things of nature only exist in minds. — Noah Te Stroete
There are properties that vary at different spatial-temporal locations but not all of them. Color and texture of the orange doesn't change as I move around it or if I were to move it relative to me. The location changes, but not the color or texture. — Harry Hindu
The common objection to this is to say something like, "Well, at the surface of the orange, the texture is such and such"--but that's a different reference point. (And this is just my point--the properties will be different at different reference points.) — Terrapin Station
Color will change if the orange is moving at particular velocities, for example--it can be blue or red-shifted, and it will change as the environment — Terrapin Station
Exactly. If the properties of the orange change, then how can we keep calling it an orange? It seems to me that it would be a different object at different reference points if what TP says is accurate.The properties of the orange do not change at different reference points. The perception of the orange changes at different reference points. — Noah Te Stroete
A relationship between two or more reference points can change if just one reference point changes and not the other. So it seems to me that there could still be constants in reality even though appearances change. — Harry Hindu
Exactly. If the properties of the orange change, then how can we keep calling it an orange? It seems to me that it would be a different object at different reference points of what TP says is accurate. — Harry Hindu
This is incoherent. If there is an external world that our experience isnt about, then what does it mean for our experiences to be caused by the external world?Even if your experience isn't about an external world it doesn't then follow that there isn't an external world, which is why there is a middle ground. There is an external world that is causally responsible for your experience but these external world things are not the objects of perception and are not represented by the objects of perception — Michael
The only property that is changing between you and your wife and everything else is location. That's it. Your wife is still a human being. None of that changes when you change your spatial location. Your wife does not cease existing as a human, or an organism, when you change your location.Consider this. Everything is in constant motion. I suppose that my wife sitting on the couch and me sitting in the recliner are both at rest relative to each other, but we are flying through space on this planet. If I get up and go into the kitchen, then my reference point relative to everything else in the house is constantly changing as long as I’m moving. When I stop in the kitchen, I’m at a different reference point to my wife. One always has to pick a particular reference point on an or in an object (such as in the house) in order to perceive or conceptualize what is moving and what isn’t — Noah Te Stroete
This is incoherent. If there is an external world that our experience isnt about, then what does it mean for our experiences to be caused by the external world? — Harry Hindu
The only property that is changing between you and your wife and everything else is location. That's it. Your wife is still a human being. None of that changes when you change your spatial location. — Harry Hindu
a la Kant, if there were no minds it would be incoherent to have spatio-temporal reference points. — Noah Te Stroete
But if you mean to say the human mind creates spatio-temporal reference points, then Kant would agree, for the excruciatingly simple reason Nature doesn’t incorporate them in her catalog of physical objects. If she did, you can bet yer arse there’d be a preferred one, which from our perspective of course, there isn’t. — Mww
This is incoherent. If there is an external world that our experience isnt about, then what does it mean for our experiences to be caused by the external world? — Harry Hindu
It's not that the orange is emitting light. It's reflecting it. Reflected light is doppler-shifted just as well as emitted light. — Terrapin Station
Not very fast. Radar guns work via doppler effect measurement, for example. Radar guns use microwaves, but it's all just part of the electromagnetic spectrum. — Terrapin Station
Not very fast. Radar guns work via doppler effect measurement, for example. Radar guns use microwaves, but it's all just part of the electromagnetic spectrum. — Terrapin Station
Exactly. If the properties of the orange change, then how can we keep calling it an orange? — Harry Hindu
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