This is not an absolute proof for the simple reason that we can't ever prove that we have understood our proofs correctly. — Qmeri
ps. I trust logic and science very much, but I'm just criticizing the idea of an absolute proof — Qmeri
Since the "I think, therefore I am" is neither scientific nor merely logical, it is a philosophical realization or insight, which one either accepts or not with good reasons. Nietzsche, as is well known, criticized that the experience of thinking, which was also indubitable for him, does not necessarily have to presuppose a subject. — spirit-salamander
"I think, therefore I am" Is a formal logical necessity — Qmeri
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/schlegel/Schlegel’s critique of first-principle philosophy is rooted (like Novalis’) in a sense of the ungraspability of the absolute or unconditioned. (As Novalis puts it in the first of his “Pollen” fragments: “Everywhere we seek the unconditioned [das Unbedingte], but find only things [Dinge].”) More specifically, Schlegel holds, against Reinhold and Fichte, that “there are no first principles that are universally suitable [zweckmässig] companions and guides to truth” (KA XVIII.518, #13): even “self-evident” propositions can be doubted and so require demonstration (thus opening up an infinite regress), and any proposition can be proved in an “infinite” number of ways. For Schlegel “every proof is infinitely perfectible” (KA XVIII, 518, #9), and the task of philosophy is not one of searching to find an unconditioned first principle but rather one of engaging in an (essentially coherentist) process of infinite progression and approximation.
...
The Schlegelian philosophy that results from this engagement with idealism is non-foundationalist, holistic and historical (see Beiser 2003, 123–26). Schlegel himself describes his philosophical approach as resembling both a circle and epic poetry because it must forever “begin in the middle”: “Philosophy must have at its basis not only an alternating proof [Wechselbeweis] but also an alternating concept [Wechselbegriff]. In the case of every concept, as in the case of every proof, one can in turn ask for a concept and a proof of the same. For this reason, philosophy, like an epic poem, must start in the middle, and it is impossible to pursue philosophy piece by piece starting from a first piece which is grounded and explained completely in and through itself. It is a whole, and thus the path to recognizing it is no straight line but a circle” (KA XVIII, 518). — link
Therefore nothing will ever be "an absolute proof" aka something that can't be wrong or a mistake. — Qmeri
I guess the simplest way of saying this is: One can't prove that he didn't make a mistake. — Qmeri
"I think, therefore I am"
This is not an absolute proof for the simple reason that we can't ever prove that we have understood our proofs correctly. — Qmeri
My hard statement is that all knowledge is based on intuition. — Antinatalist
If we assume classic logic in general to be true "I think, therefore I am" is analytically true. — Antinatalist
I don´t think that there´s any serious arguments against Descartes, I certainly think that he proved logically his existence for himself. — Antinatalist
My hard statement is that all knowledge is based on intuition.
— Antinatalist
....which rejects a priori judgements. — Mww
If we assume classic logic in general to be true "I think, therefore I am" is analytically true.
— Antinatalist
...which is necessarily an a priori judgement. — Mww
People do think of it that way. But here, in the sections following the section in which ”Cogito... is posited, is found “the first and most certain...”, which is congruent with your “analytically true”. So Descartes himself didn’t logically prove anything, per se; he merely espoused something as impossible for him to not know immediately, without any intervening arbitration. — Mww
“....I have often noticed that philosophers make the mistake of trying to explain things that were already very simple and self-evident, by producing logical definitions that make things worse! When I said that the proposition I am thinking, therefore I exist is ‘the first and most certain thing to occur to anyone who philosophizes in an orderly way’, I wasn’t meaning to deny that one must first know what thought, existence and certainty are, and know that it’s impossible for something to think while it doesn’t exist, and the like....”
(Principles of Philosophy, I.10., 1644, in Cottingham, Cambridge, 1985)
Even so, the serious argument....assuming there is one..... revolves around exactly what existence, and thereby what kind of existence, Descartes was so sure of. All he said about “....I am”, is “...we can’t suppose that we, who are having such thoughts, are nothing....” (ibid, Sec 7). He is saying what I am not, but doesn’t say what I am, only that I am.
My interpretations only, of course. — Mww
My hard statement is that all knowledge is based on intuition.
— Antinatalist
....which rejects a priori judgements.
— Mww
Perhaps so, but what is the relation between a priori judgments and knowledge? Just asking (what you think). — Antinatalist
......without any intervening arbitration.
— Mww
I agree. If you mean, that he didn´t found any new logical truths. — Antinatalist
It is mystery what this "I" is. — Antinatalist
My hard statement is that all knowledge is based on intuition.
— Antinatalist
....which rejects a priori judgements.
— Mww
Perhaps so, but what is the relation between a priori judgments and knowledge? Just asking (what you think).
— Antinatalist
What I think:
All empirical judgements are intuitive, hence contingent; all a priori judgements are discursive, hence necessary. Knowledge from intuitive judgements is experience; knowledge from discursive judgements is reason. — Mww
Not for the hard sciences, for the most part finding no empirical reason to acknowledge the validity of it. Brain states, recyclable neurotransmitters, variable ion potentials and all that jazz, doncha know. And not for speculative epistemology, which grants that the “I” represents the unity of the manifold constituency of consciousness. But then, metaphysics is a mystery in itself, so....there is that. — Mww
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