But it only leads to a contraction if it is assumed that the two are not distinct. That's why it's a contradiction. Which means the claim that B. assumes that there is a distinction is wrong. — StreetlightX
No, Berkeley's master argument is not based on a tautology. It is a reductio of the realist's claim that he can conceive of something that no one is conceiving of.
Assumption for reductio: It is possible to conceive of something that no one conceives of.
Hypothetical assumption: Someone conceives of something that no one conceives of.
But by hypothesis, someone is conceiving of it.
Therefore, someone does not conceive of something that no one conceives of.
Therefore, by discharging of the assumptionL it is not possible to conceive of something that no one conceives of. — The Great Whatever
I'm not sure what it means to conceive of the possibility of an object. I'm trying to do it and I don't know what it is. — The Great Whatever
Assumption: It is possible to conceive the possible existence of some object of which no one conceives . — John
We gain access to the structure of reality via a machinery of conception which
extracts intelligible indices from a world that is not designed to be intelligible and is
not originarily infused with meaning. — Brassier
The claim is that it is not possible to conceive of something that no one is conceiving of. But this is precisely what the realist calls for, — The Great Whatever
Realists are not interested in what is conceived of to be unconceived; they are interested in what is unconceived. — The Great Whatever
It does seem to me that if this among our presuppositions, if we think this to begin with, we will inevitably end up with this gulf between concepts and objects, and an underlying notion of the 'reality' of 'objects'. — mcdoodle
"The articulation of thought and being is necessarily conceptual follows from the Critical injunction which rules out any recourse to the doctrine of a pre-established harmony between reality and ideality. Thought is not guaranteed access to being; being is not inherently thinkable. There is no cognitive ingress to the real save through the concept" (§§3)/ "We gain access to the structure of reality via a machinery of conception which extracts intelligible indices from a world that is not designed to be intelligible and is not originarily infused with meaning. Meaning is a function of conception and conception involves representation ... It falls to conceptual rationality to forge the explanatory bridge from thought to being. (§§3)/ "To know (in the strong scientific sense) what something is is to conceptualize it." — StreetlightX
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