Our cat sitting on the floor presents no problems to solve, creates no doubts that plague us, no needs to be satisfied, no questions to answer, no reason to think. — Ciceronianus the White
Our cat sitting on the floor presents no problems to solve, creates no doubts that plague us, — Ciceronianus the White
I don't think we reason, or engage in scientific inquiry, or even think unless we encounter a problem — Ciceronianus the White
You're then habituated to the idea. Is that how you understand knowledge? — tim wood
:up:It's no wonder that such a narrow definition of "knowledge" leads to Skepticism and Idealism. — Ciceronianus the White
Like many philosophers, Kant could be interpreted, and quoted, from both sides of the religion question. Nominally, he was a conventional Lutheran. But some of his ideas would make his fellow Christians uncomfortable. It's true that his Critique of Human Reason, allowed room for Faith. But, he could also be critical of some religious beliefs.And just here a mini-lesson in the dangers of reading and relying on secondary sources, and even more on quoting excerpts. — tim wood
Hence, your negative reaction to the notion of Transcendence. I will agree that denial of the mundane Reality of our direct experience is unjustified. But to deny that there is also something beyond the scope of our senses, is also unreasonable.There certainly are limits to human reason, but to claim the real is forever beyond our knowledge seems, to me, excessive, and unjustified. — Ciceronianus the White
Seems a disingenuously rhetorical formulation: why ask if you've already decided I'm a philistine?right. You have a utilitarian functional understanding of knowledge. All of which is granted, granted, granted. With such knowledge you can buy beer and groceries. Now a challenge: what do you say knowledge is? — tim wood
The convergence of a Peircean community of inquirers reasoning towards the best explanation of transformations of matters of fact or translations of/within formalisms. Knowledge, "in a general sense", is a commons, or warranted public concern, unlike "opinons" which are merely unwarranted, subjective noises.Now a challenge: what do you say knowledge is? What is the case - or must be the case - to move from opinion to knowledge? Not in any particular sense, but in the general sense.
A truism. Hardly a "Copernican revolution". Reason – discursive practices, or language – is public and not private (i.e. located in the 'Cartesian subject' as Kant mistakenly assumes and Hegel corrects!)In this, knowledge is constrained, bounded by, and limited to what reason can present.
It appears that you accept uncritically as knowledge that which you think you know. And fair enough, that's how a lot of the world's work and play get done. — tim wood
What do you do when need to take a critical stance? That is, when you have to know for yourself? What do you dig into, how, and how and why do you rely on that? Kant's answer, as I read it, was it's this way (that he described) or no way. The this way takes reason, which in the case of perception, is simply no part at all of the thing-(in-itself-as-it-is-in-itself) perceived. — tim wood
The language is simple; e.g., "I see a tree." What exactly does that simple language entail to be meaningful? Care to take a try at it? The one thing it cannot mean is that you see the tree. If you disagree, then make the case. — tim wood
But to deny that there is also something beyond the scope of our senses, is also unreasonable. — Gnomon
I agree that Nescience is just as rare as Omniscience. So I muddle along somewhere in the middle, consoled by the knowledge than even Socrates admitted that "one thing I know is that I know nothing". But that was an intentionally paradoxical statement.That's so. We know that to be the case. But this doesn't mean that there is in all cases something not only outside the scope of our senses, but something we can never know. — Ciceronianus the White
What does the wall interfere with that prevents that? — tim wood
what may have been the problem needing to be solved, which inspired you to think we do not think unless there is one? — Mww
Yes. The paradox of human Reason is that it is the mechanism by which we come to know Reality, but it is also the ability to imagine worlds that don't exist in reality. So, it's the job of Philosophy and Science to sort-out the real from the unreal. But, it's a hard job, and there's still a lot of gray area for us to quibble about. :nerd:In this, knowledge is constrained, bounded by, and limited to what reason can present. — tim wood
I don't think we reason, or engage in scientific inquiry, or even think unless we encounter a problem — Ciceronianus the White
.....what may have been the problem needing to be solved, which inspired you to think we do not think unless there is one? — Mww
the "problem" here would be the desire to understand why we bother thinking, wouldn't it? — Janus
pragmatists may have a point. — Janus
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