what is the trigger here to adopt the "a priori" knowledge? — Meichen Fan
Maybe to express it in words. I read that one of two innate fears present in infants is of falling (the other, loud noises). That certainly implies a capacity.to trigger the capacity of “a priori” — Meichen Fan
Good for you! You're now ahead of 99.99% of people who express opinions on Kant. Nor apologies accepted or needed. And I see @Mww has chimed in, imo a very good thing for any discussion on Kant.I started to read Kant’s pure critique of metaphysics recently and only finished up to Transcendental Aesthetics so far. Therefore, my sincere apologies in advance for my ignorance on the subject. — Meichen Fan
Kant says himself he can rationalize the categorical imperatives, but cannot comprehend the cause of them. — One piece
May I take “knowledge as what can be known and how it can be known” as a form of capacity?
If I understand it correctly, Kant uses space and time as an example to demonstrate how is synthetic a priori knowledge possible. Take Kant’s space(his argument for time and space is seemingly parallel to each other) as an example, as Kant argues, 1)space is not empirical. Empirical concept derives from experience, yet the experiences from which we would deprive space already presuppose the latter. And, Space is a priori. Though we can imagine objects away, we can never do so for space. 2)Space is not a concept, but an intuition, and followed Kant listed two arguments to support his claim.
However, even for a priori analytic knowledge, which is the trivial, definitional truth(like what you have mentioned in the example: a bachelor is an unmarried one, which we can know from merely the concept itself with no empirical experience), it has to, as you said in the bracket, beyond knowing the meanings of the words.
I understand that Kant’s a priori, defined by necessity and universality, is in its nature independent of empirical knowledge, but it seems like there needs to be some “experience” involved in the phase of “knowing the meaning of the words” in the first place to trigger the capacity of “a priori”(I feel like I am possibly making mistake here).
Under such conditions, is the “a priori” knowledge still counts as “a priori”?
If such capacity is not innate, I fail to figure out how can it escape the involvement of experience in the first place. — Meichen Fan
I understand that Kant’s a priori, defined by necessity and universality, is in its nature independent of empirical knowledge, but it seems like there needs to be some “experience” involved in the phase of “knowing the meaning of the words” in the first place to trigger the capacity of “a priori”(I feel like I am possibly making mistake here).
Under such conditions, is the “a priori” knowledge still counts as “a priori”? — Meichen Fan
Therefore, how can we distinguish "a priori" knowledge from innate ideas/knowledge? — Meichen Fan
If the mind with "a priori" knowledge is not born with ideas/knowledge, what is the trigger here to adopt the "a priori" knowledge? — Meichen Fan
If such capacity is not innate, I fail to figure out how can it escape the involvement of experience in the first place.
— Meichen Fan
I think I’m with you on this one. — Possibility
Because observation grants a human is moral before he is intelligent, and because experience itself is absent in pre-intelligent humans, after all the metaphysical reductionism, pure practical reason is given as an innate condition in humans logically. Within the confines of a specific epistemological domain, human morality cannot be explained without the permission of pure practical reason, and in which intelligence is not yet a consideration. — Mww
So.....a priori and a posteriori reduce to the manner in which our cognitive faculties operate. A priori does not use the faculties of empirical representation (sensibility), a posteriori does not use the faculties of conceptual representation (understanding). They work together equally for direct empirical knowledge, one merely conditions the other for indirect empirical knowledge, and they are entirely separate for rational knowledge. — Mww
I'm not quite sure at what you're getting at here. Where would instincts fall into this explanation? Are instincts a form of knowledge? Does a newborn baby "know" how to root and grasp? Are these a priori or posteriori? Is there any sensibility for them in those actions?A priori is a relational determination in the human complementary cognitive system. It is merely in juxtaposition to a posteriori, the latter given from sensibility, the former absent sensibility. But absent sensibility itself has two conditions, absent immediate sensibility, or, that of which perception and its representations are not present at the time of cognition, and, absent any sensibility whatsoever in any time of cognition. — Mww
Would you say there are conditions in which a priori knowledge can be rendered susceptible (to empirical information)? — Possibility
A priori is a relational determination in the human complementary cognitive system.
— Mww
Where would instincts fall into this explanation. — Harry Hindu
It also seems to me....... — Harry Hindu
Contrary to common misreadings, Kant expressly resisted and actively denied the conflation of the a priori with the innate: "The Critique [of Pure Reason] admits absolutely no divinely implanted (anerschaffene) or innate (angeborene) representations — StreetlightX
But as it stands, the a priori is not the innate, and to confuse the two would be a fatal misreading of Kant. — StreetlightX
They don’t. Instinct is innate and automatic, cognition is developed and reactive. — Mww
I was reflecting on your seemings, not mine.Ok, no problem. Everyone is entitled to his own seemings. — Mww
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