I meant that the concept "apple" is one and the same as the object "apple", which is the word "apple". — Metaphysician Undercover
Given that, what seems a more interesting discussion topic is are three related issues:
(B1) What circumstances necessitate adopting linguistic analysis as a philosophical methodology? — fdrake
I don't think this is quite right, but I think this partly down to how to phrased things with the dichotomy language/world. I need to modify what I said above: it is in fact the case that language and world can 'come apart', but the key thing is to recognise instances when they do. 'Linguistic analysis' ('LA'), as I understand it, is the attempt to track when language and world depart from one another, despite the impression that they have not (what Witty calls 'being held captive by a picture' or somesuch). There's a passage from Cavell that I really like that brings out the critical import of LA here, where he uses a really interesting turn of phrase, on making words 'nothing but their meaning': — StreetlightX
Obviously, as we have already agreed, linguistic analysis in the tradition of Wittgenstein and Austin isn't the be-all and end-all of understanding, but it is an important study, helping us to understand many confusions that arise philosophically. — Sam26
Why would you think the concept is the source of the word rather than that the word is the source of the concept? — Metaphysician Undercover
I think that words are concepts. — Metaphysician Undercover
but "pure thought" doesn't necessarily contains concepts. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is only when we think in words, or other symbols like mathematical symbols, that we think in concepts. — Metaphysician Undercover
What happens after the confusions are dispelled? Does that speak to the veracity of the cleared ground, or is it simply a case of being better off to do whatever else is required than before? I'm always wary of leaving the implicit accounts our use of language has as the final word, when their analysis is intended only to be the first. — fdrake
Again, human cognition is a process, some of which is absent from our awareness. Words are never absent from our awareness, which makes explicit some part of human cognition cannot be predicated on words. — Mww
There's still room for a positive account, and here it looks to require much different tools to build. Linguistic analysis can show us holes in intuition there, a different perspective is required to give anything like a positive account. — fdrake
Do you think that this part of cognition which is absent from our awareness (...) uses words? — Metaphysician Undercover
human cognition is a process, some of which is absent from our awareness. Words are never absent from our awareness, which makes explicit some part of human cognition cannot be predicated on words.
— Mww
I don't agree with this division. We can free our minds from words. Try humming a tune for example. — Metaphysician Undercover
But if you cannot successfully banish all words from your mind you cannot control which words are in your mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
What happens after the confusions are dispelled? Does that speak to the veracity of the cleared ground, or is it simply a case of being better off to do whatever else is required than before? I'm always wary of leaving the implicit accounts our use of language has as the final word, when their analysis is intended only to be the first.
I think....not a chance. Only the preliminaries for empirical cognitions function absent our awareness, which makes sense because to be unaware of the objects of cognition reason creates on its own accord is contradictory. — Mww
So how would you draw a line between which activities happen absent of awareness and which activities require awareness? — Metaphysician Undercover
I could get right into the activities of all my muscles when I'm walking, and I'm sure I'm not aware of all that. — Metaphysician Undercover
Suppose someone asks me a question, and I answer from habit, without really thinking. — Metaphysician Undercover
.in that me telling you all about the human faculty of representation, for which the necessity of language is given in the objective telling but not in the subjective doing, is congruent to subjectively getting right into the activities of the muscles used in objectively walking. In other words, inasmuch as we only think about walking muscles for some reason other than merely walking, so too do we only think about the unconscious operation of the faculty of representation for some other reason than merely thinking. We walk, but how is it that we walk; we think, but how is it that we think. Same-o, same-o. — Mww
So....answering from habit still requires thought, just doesn’t require understanding to waste any time on it. Because answering a question even out of habit, presupposes a set of empirical conditions in the form of the receptivity of the question, the unconscious cognitive apparatus remains in play just as in any other empirical consideration. Of the myriad of intuitions residing in consciousness, of all the possible answers to that question, just slightly different this or that (his shirt was red (redwood, rosewood, rust, terra cotta and auburn)) the habitual answer is only one, because its precedent has been set, hence the impossibility of understanding contradicting itself. This is how contemplation in judgement, from which the answer is delivered as its cognition, is shown to be unnecessary, and from which follows the immediacy of habitual cognitions in general. — Mww
We were talking about awareness. — Metaphysician Undercover
The habitual answer is not the only answer, because a person might interrupt one's own inclination to speak, and decide on a different answer. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the whole apparatus of speaking appears to be an interplay between allowing what comes to one's mind by habit, and also at the same time possibly declining this, to decide on saying something else. — Metaphysician Undercover
It may be the case that all words come from the unconscious cognitive apparatus, and the conscious mind only makes the judgement of whether or not to say them. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don’t care for “allowing to come to one’s mind”; it carries the implication I could actually prevent something from coming into my mind. — Mww
We don’t “allow” thoughts; they arise from reason necessarily, invited or uninvited, from our very nature as humans, and we may allow them to matter if they relate to something or we may reject them because they don’t. — Mww
From here, that which comes to one’s mind by habit is just a repetitive relation, or, which is the same thing, good ol’ experience. — Mww
I don’t know or care much about “the whole apparatus of speaking”, but I suspect it is mostly sheer mechanics — Mww
But there must be some part of the speech apparatus in which the thought of what to say transitions into being said, at least in general conversation, which would seem to be a lot like your walking muscles.....operating behind the conscious scenes and only comes to the fore upon defect or accident of some kind. Just as stumbling is not necessarily the fault of muscles, so too is speaking falsely not the fault of the language. — Mww
Positing that words come from a place still needs justification for the ways and means of them being there. Going to be pretty hard to tell ourselves something about that of which we are not consciously aware, except as a logical possibility. Which sometimes just has to be good enough. — Mww
We prevent things from coming into our mind all the time. — Metaphysician Undercover
Once you accept as the phrase you will say, and say it "…" you prevent other possibilities from coming to your mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
When we pass judgement, decide that the solution has been found, we no longer think about that subject. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's why people on this forum will defend a position to no end, refusing to even consider contrary arguments. — Metaphysician Undercover
From here, that which comes to one’s mind by habit is just a repetitive relation, or, which is the same thing, good ol’ experience.
— Mww
If this were really the case, how would it differ from straight forward memory? — Metaphysician Undercover
It's not really the case though, because each situation that a person finds oneself in is different from the last, so we can't describe this as a "repetitive relation". — Metaphysician Undercover
It's more like the words just come to mind in relation to each other, like some words just kind of go together, and the situation (being asked a question with specific words for example) just sort of triggers a particular grouping of words to come forward as a reply. — Metaphysician Undercover
What I suggested is that certain combinations of words come from the memory into the conscious mind, depending on the situation, in a sort of habitual way. But how can this really be habitual, when all the situations are different, and the combination of words which comes forward into the mind as ready to be spoken, is tailored for the situation already, when it comes into the conscious mind? How can an action be said to be habitual when it is different every time it occurs? — Metaphysician Undercover
If “we” have that much influence on “mind”, than we and mind must be separate entities. I reject that “I” am in any way distinct and separate from my mind; “I” am my mind. To say some natural activity that justifies and legitimizes what this “I” is, by means of the manifold of my thoughts, is willfully prevented by that very same “I” from thinking something less than that manifold, is ultimately a self-contradiction. This condition can be alleviated by granting reason as possessing sufficient power for preventing things from coming into the mind, in as much as reason prevents nothing except logical impossibilities from coming into the mind, as a consequence of the human methodological system. — Mww
To say we can prevent a thing from coming into the mind presupposes the thing. The thing presupposed is at least a valid conception, otherwise we are preventing a thing that is nothing. But to conceive a thing makes explicit it has already entered the mind, for the faculties of mind in general are the sole arbiters of validity in conceptions. — Mww
Such are two arguments refuting the assertion we can prevent things from coming into the mind. — Mww
Can you honestly tell me you’ve had more than one thought at a time? I’d be very suspicious of an affirmative claim, insofar as it is generally accepted in the literature that human thought is singular and successive, rather multiple and co-existent. It follows that words representing thoughts and phrases representing groups of thoughts, and eventually representing cognitions, must also be singular and successive. — Mww
So you think that as soon as I, e.g., learn arithmetic propositions, I don’t think about them the next time I find myself in the presence of one? — Mww
Even if I need no noticeable time in the accomplishment of any learned task, I am still required to relate something to something else, such the solution of the same problem is consistent. — Mww
Hmmmm....possibly correct; I should have been more precise in my terminology. If I see a red apple more than once, the observations of apples is repetitive and its relations hold, but if I’ve never seen a green apple, the concept “apple” fails in at least one of its relations, so technically I have no right to know the green thing as an apple. Nonetheless, if I observe this green thing on the ground under an apple tree, surrounded by red apples, similar extension and mass being given, I am safe in drawing a new relation, such that future observations will abide as repetitive relations. — Mww
Some concepts go together, and some situation will trigger concepts to come forward. Introspection resolves the “inner voice” reality, but we spend far less time introspecting than we do understanding the world’s relationship to us, which just means we use words less than we use the means to understand the world, through the representations of mental imagery. — Mww
Do you recognize how screwed the system would be, if it required absolute precision for each of its responses to any given situation? If “it was an accident” was the habitual response for tipping over a glass of water, wouldn’t it suffice for tipping over a glass of milk? Particular relations can hold in general experiences. — Mww
Such are two arguments refuting the assertion we can prevent things from coming into the mind.
— Mww
You argument is clearly contradictory. It assumes that something must exist before it can be prevented. But that's nonsensical contradiction, because if it exists, it hasn't been prevented. — Metaphysician Undercover
We commonly prevent things which we haven't even identified. We do this by limiting the possibilities. By doing one thing (,) in the next minute I prevent a whole bunch of things from happening which were possible, but now impossible, which I haven't even identified. — Metaphysician Undercover
Can you honestly tell me you’ve had more than one thought at a time? I’d be very suspicious of an affirmative claim......
— Mww
You don't seem to grasp the issue. Suppose I have an open question in my mind, "what will I do tomorrow morning?". As soon as an idea comes which I accept, and I decide that's what I will do tomorrow morning, then I stop thinking about it, and no more ideas for what I might do tomorrow morning come to my mind. I close my mind to that subject. — Metaphysician Undercover
The thinking goes into solving the problem, but once the problem is solved the procedure is carried out without thought. — Metaphysician Undercover
If someone asked me, when I see an apple, how do I know it is an apple, I would say I don't know, I just kind of recognize it as an apple. So I can start to describe an apple, different features, but this is not really how I know an apple is an apple, by naming these features I see in it. I just see an apple, and somehow I know it's an apple, without relating it to anything else, or comparing features. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now, WE, in order to responsible for preventing something from coming into the mind, must have something presented to us, otherwise we have nothing to work with, and if we have nothing to work with it cannot be said anything occurred, in this case, the occurrence of prevention for which we are the cause. — Mww
From this, it is clear it makes no difference what this something is that is necessary for us to work with, but the very minimal thing it can be, and still be an affect on the mind, is a conception. — Mww
We, as conscious, otherwise fully cognizant individual humans, cannot prevent things from coming into the mind. — Mww
The content of the thought at t1 makes no absolutely necessary restriction whatsoever on the content of the thought at t2 — Mww
Issue grasping? So what...you have a bunch of ideas on a subject, one right after another, pick one, cease examining further ideas, stop thinking about the subject. Move on to the next. How is that any different overall than what I said? — Mww
Carried out without the same thinking that went into solving the problem, but not without thinking of some kind. — Mww
Even if you’ve done the same problem repeatedly, since the solution of it, you still have to do something mentally in order to ensure the solution you give actually belongs to the problem given to you. — Mww
Thinking and reasoning are carried out for a purpose. In general the purpose is to solve a problem. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now, WE, in order to responsible for preventing something from coming into the mind, must have something presented to us, otherwise we have nothing to work with, and if we have nothing to work with it cannot be said anything occurred, in this case, the occurrence of prevention for which we are the cause.
— Mww
It is not the case that we have nothing to work with. We have something to work with, this is the subject, what is being thought about, what I described as the problem to be solved. Once the thinker believes oneself to have solved the problem, further thoughts about that problem, and alternative solutions are prevented. Are you denying this? — Metaphysician Undercover
From this, it is clear it makes no difference what this something is that is necessary for us to work with, but the very minimal thing it can be, and still be an affect on the mind, is a conception.
— Mww
Are you saying that a problem to be solved is a conception? I don't think so. Conceiving the exact nature of the problem is half way to solving it. — Metaphysician Undercover
The content of the thought at t1 makes no absolutely necessary restriction whatsoever on the content of the thought at t2
— Mww
Are you serious? Despite the fact that I do not know what you might mean by "absolutely necessary restriction", if it were true that the thoughts at t1 had no restriction whatsoever on the thoughts at t2, we'd have no control over our thoughts at all. The temporal progression of thoughts would be completely random. — Metaphysician Undercover
Issue grasping? So what...you have a bunch of ideas on a subject, one right after another, pick one, cease examining further ideas, stop thinking about the subject. Move on to the next. How is that any different overall than what I said?
— Mww
What I say is different from what you say because I say that "picking one", deciding, choosing, is what allows one to stop thinking about the subject. You are arguing that a person cannot stop oneself from thinking about a subject. — Metaphysician Undercover
Even if you’ve done the same problem repeatedly, since the solution of it, you still have to do something mentally in order to ensure the solution you give actually belongs to the problem given to you.
— Mww
Yes, I agree you must do something mentally, but all you have to do is pass it in front of your conscious mind to make sure it looks right. That is the point, the person is not solving the problem at this point, just making sure that it looks right. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, insofar as it is false that alternative solutions are necessarily prevented. — Mww
Once the thinker has solved the problem, further thoughts about that problem, and alternative solutions qua solutions, are just redundant, and if pursued could actually be irrational, illogical or even catastrophic. — Mww
On the other hand, there’s nothing preventing further thought on an alternative solution facilitating a solution of greater benefit. But even a greater benefit is not a necessity in itself. Nahhhhh.....not thinking an alternative solution is not the prevention of it; not thinking an alternative solution is merely the lack of causality for it. — Mww
And I question the relevance. When we’re awake and aware, we always have something to work with, because it is impossible to prevent, which has been my position all along. The questionable relevance arises from the fact that the something we always have to work with is not always a problem to be solved. Problem solving is the domain of empirical psychology/anthropology, where the analysis of words and concepts is the domain of pure reason, or, speculative epistemology. — Mww
Me: something necessary; minimal; conception;
You: problem, conception, solution;
How in the hell am I suppose to relate those? I never said anything about a problem, or anything that could relate to a problem.
What is a problem if not a separation between what is given and what is known. Conceiving the exact nature of a problem is understanding the synthesis of its fundamental a priori representations, and judging that relation to experience. So no, a problem to be solved is not a conception alone, but rather, it is reason in conflict with itself, temporarily if subsequently solved without contradiction, other than temporarily if solved with contradictions, hence irrationally, or, permanently, if unsolved because of insufficient rational predicates. — Mww
Absolutely necessary is one of two principles of law, the other being universality. Reason, and by association, human thought, is not law-abiding, which is sufficient reason to justify the proposition that thought at t1 does not legislate thought at t2. Thought may be random, and often is, but it stands just as much chance of being pertinent, or logically related, to its antecedent.
—————— — Mww
Absolutely necessary is one of two principles of law, the other being universality. Reason, and by association, human thought, is not law-abiding, which is sufficient reason to justify the proposition that thought at t1 does not legislate thought at t2. Thought may be random, and often is, but it stands just as much chance of being pertinent, or logically related, to its antecedent. — Mww
Not to put too fine a point on it, but what we’re conventionally calling the subject is actually the object. That which is thought about is the object of thought, the subject being that to which the thought belongs, the thinker, represented by “I”, or other grammatically coherent personal pronouns. The proper form of all human thought is “I think (__x___), x being the object to which the subject directs himself. Such is the only reasonable way to account for subjectivity, even if it is only an appearance. — Mww
And what would that be, except thinking? Is there something else we do mentally, such that knowledge is possible from it? Feelings don’t count here; they are not cognitions, and we’re not interested in whether or not feelings “look right”. — Mww
......which is saying the same thing as your (b) here today.If you’d said the content of a thought at t1 prevents any other content of that thought, I would have agreed. — Mww
I agree with this, we cannot prevent thoughts in an absolute sense. (...). If you agree, we can call this "content", or "subject matter". I like the latter because it implies a sort of "matter" which is proper to the individual human "subject".
Would you agree that this "subject matter" is what is derived from the unconscious, and taken by the conscious mind to be worked with? — Metaphysician Undercover
....well done indeed. Each line has something which can be said about it, but taking just a few.....However, if we adhere to the Aristotelian concept of "matter" — Metaphysician Undercover
we might allow that this subject matter has no necessity of any particular form, though it necessarily has "form". There is no particular form which is proper to it. So it might come to the mind in any "form", a problem, a word, a concept, etc., it still must come to the mind as a form. — Metaphysician Undercover
Would you agree that this "subject matter" is what is derived from the unconscious, and taken by the conscious mind to be worked with? As required for thinking, it is temporally prior to the conscious act of thinking......
(Not exactly. Forms from intuition and appearances from sensibility are the subject matter of the unconscious faculty of imagination, the synthesis of which gives us phenomena. So yes....forms are required for thinking, are temporally prior to conscious thinking, but forms are not taken up to be worked with by the conscious mind. Judgement and cognition are operatives in the conscious thought, forms being left far behind in the process.)
.......and therefore the conscious mind has no capacity for causal impact on this subject matter....
(Agreed. The conscious part of the mind already has its conditions set. It only remains for judgement to conform to or conflict with experience.)
.....However, if we adhere to the Aristotelian concept of "matter", we might allow that this subject matter has no necessity of any particular form, though it necessarily has "form". There is no particular form which is proper to it. So it might come to the mind in any "form", a problem, a word, a concept, etc., it still must come to the mind as a form. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, since the "form" is what the conscious mind works with.....
(No, it isn’t. The conscious mind works with cognition. Imagination works with forms.
.......and the conscious mind has the capacity to change the form which the subject matter has.....
(No, it can’t. At best, the conscious mind can misjudge the phenomenon given to it by the unconscious.)
...... through imposing the causal limitations described above, the subject matter itself has no inherent capacity to restrict the conscious mind.....
(True, but not for those reasons)
...........So in spite of the fact that we tend to think that things come to the conscious mind from the unconscious systems,.....
(Agreed, they cannot arrive in the conscious mind any other way than through the antecedent unconscious. Nothing whatsoever comes immediately into the conscious mind, but is always conditioned by the unconscious.)
...............and these things constitute the content of the thought, as imposing on the person, what that person will think about,.....
(True)
......this is actually false,....
(Gasp)
.......because the conscious mind will actually impose the form (the 'whatness') on to that subject matter, through the imposition of the restrictions described. This is how we can say that the will is free. — Metaphysician Undercover
You appear to be claiming that the subject matter, the content which comes to the conscious mind, from the unconscious, is necessarily a "conception", and this is what I dispute. — Metaphysician Undercover
So within the conscious mind there is both "what is given", subject matter with a particular form, and "what is known", conceptions, as universal forms. — Metaphysician Undercover
"Reason" by definition is law abiding. — Metaphysician Undercover
Your (b) is correct: the time of action taken, is the time of the thought of the solution, and because we have but one thought at a time, all other thoughts, as alternative solutions, are prevented therefrom. — Mww
From his post-solution time, he can easily think another solution, which means it is false further solutions are prevented. — Mww
The one and only time in which no other and all alternative solutions is prevented, is the time of the thought of a solution. This principle applies for any number of successive thoughts, for each and every thought can be a solution in itself. — Mww
I should have given your comment on conscious vs unconscious parts of mind, and the general uselessness of the conception itself, more attention. It is relevant now, because you brought up coming to the mind, and we never agreed on what that really means. In the Kantian sense, form is a priori, hence derived from the unconscious, and from that the fun, and rampant confusion, really begins...... — Mww
Physical objects do have proper form, which is the particular arrangement of its matter. So....“subject matter” as mere sense data alone, does come from the unconscious part of mind in a particular form, but is yet unknowable to the conscious mind. This kind of form is called intuition, by which we represent to ourselves the arrangement of the matter of a thing as it is perceived. This is the fur, claws, whiskers, etc., thought to belong to some yet unnamed thing, which will eventually become conceived as some kind or another, of “cat”. — Mww
Forms from intuition and appearances from sensibility are the subject matter of the unconscious faculty of imagination, the synthesis of which gives us phenomena. — Mww
The conscious mind works with. Imagination works with forms. — Mww
Moral philosophy has nothing to do with speculative epistemology) — Mww
Within the conscious mind is subject matter, yes, but that subject matter is what is known, or possibly known. Experience or possible experience. — Mww
If that were the case, irrationality would be impossible. We would never make a mistake in judgement if all understandings were predicated on necessity and universality. — Mww
In the Kantian sense, form is a priori, hence derived from the unconscious, and from that the fun, and rampant confusion, really begins...... — Mww
From his post-solution time, he can easily think another solution, which means it is false further solutions are prevented.
— Mww
He can think of another solution, but he doesn't because he believes the problem has been solved. Therefore these thoughts (looking for other solutions) are prevented. — Metaphysician Undercover
Of course it is possible that at some future time the person will reconsider, and at that time allow those thoughts — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm wary of the Kantian use of "form", because in the Aristotelian sense "form" is strictly actual, while Kant seemed to allow "form" to be possibility. — Metaphysician Undercover
So when we talk about what is derived from the unconscious, if this is understood as possibilities for thought, then we must place it in the category of matter rather than form, if we adhere to Aristotelian terms. — Metaphysician Undercover
Forms from intuition and appearances from sensibility are the subject matter of the unconscious faculty of imagination, the synthesis of which gives us phenomena.
— Mww
I wouldn't say this though. The faculty of imagination gives us forms, as images, what you call phenomena. If that faculty works with both, forms from intuition, and appearances from sensation, I would say that only one of these is the "subject matter". Since we have a workable form/matter distinction, and we say that the imagination gets forms from intuition, then we ought to say that it gets subject matter from sensation, and synthesis of the two is phenomena. — Metaphysician Undercover
An important point though, is that the subject matter, the appearances from sensibility, must already have forms of their own — Metaphysician Undercover
So even within this unconscious faculty of imagination, there must be something (a faculty) which establishes compatibility or consistency between the forms from intuition and the forms from sensibility (which are the material aspect, as the possibility of phenomena, contrary to Kant) — Metaphysician Undercover
Within the conscious mind is subject matter, yes, but that subject matter is what is known, or possibly known. Experience or possible experience.
— Mww
I don't think you are adequately grasping the role of the possible......
(Perhaps not, as you envision it. From where I sit, my grasp is doing ok)
.........There are two distinct roles for "the actual". There is the actual which is activity within, creating forms of intuition, knowledge, etc.. And, there is the actual which is activity outside the individual subject, creating the material world of objects. The two types of activity need to be understood as distinct.....
(Granted. Actual a priori and actual a posteriori. Both from the principle of cause and effect. Done deal.)
............as I described, because the internal forms are universal principles, while the forms external to me are individuals, particulars. Since we cannot establish compatibility between these two types of activity, within and without,.....
(But we can; there is compatibility or there is not. Either of which is an establishment with respect to ontological disparity)
........we look at all the external activity as possibility.....
(Yeah, I guess, sorta. The external activity is given, so not a possibility, but knowledge of what the external activity entails, is possibility. In effect, what we are trying to establish is not compatibility, but intelligibility, insofar as the external activity could be anything at all, but in order for us to comprehend it, it absolutely must at the very least be logically possible, or......intelligible.)
........Then we have the basis for a dichotomy. But the dichotomy doesn't work, because it's not clear cut....
(Isn’t external/internal clear cut?)
............Judgement and decision are how we impose activity onto the external possibility, while indecisiveness and skepticism is how possibility seeps into the internal activity. So we cannot hold such a dichotomy. — Metaphysician Undercover
If that were the case, irrationality would be impossible. We would never make a mistake in judgement if all understandings were predicated on necessity and universality.
— Mww
Why do you say that? Failing to abide by the law is a real possibility. What you don't seem to realize is that law does not produce necessity, laws are produced out of some necessity.....
(Correct, we may fail to abide by law as the condition of our thinking, as witnessed by our possible errors in judgement, which is the same as being unintentionally irrational. All that means is that it was never absolutely necessary we think in a certain way to begin with, which is the same as saying reason is not law-abiding in itself. It couldn’t be, given the differences in subjectivity in otherwise perfectly similar people. Still, if a cognitive system as a whole is theoretically predicated on logic, then reason should theoretically adhere to logical law in order for us to trust in its authority.)
..........This is why it is far better to approach this subject from the precepts of moral philosophy, rather than to approach it as a speculative epistemology. — Metaphysician Undercover
The precise separation between passive (possible) intellect, and active (agent) intellect, has never been resolved. Logic has determined the need to assume both of these as distinct categories, but no one has been able to adequately demonstrate which things are property of each, because all things are a combination of both (matter/form). — Metaphysician Undercover
Some wanted to deny material elements within the mind, attempting to maintain the pure immateriality of the human mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's why I propose we go to a different form of analysis, a sort of analysis where we look at the things to be categorized as essentially of one category, with accidents of the other category, in an attempt to avoid the confusion. — Metaphysician Undercover
The real dichotomy it is far more complex. — Metaphysician Undercover
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