It is the view a thing in itself has of us. — Cheshire
that we can only know things as they appear to us. — Wayfarer
I can agree that it seems common sense. I think that is because we know what it's like to imagine a different point of view. But, in this case we are imagining a point of view that doesn't exist by definition. When is the case we'll be seeing something without a perspective and how will it compare to when we do have one?The point of Kant’s idea of the thing in itself is simply that perspective is inextricable from the knowledge of appearances, that we can only know things as they appear to us. I’m generally bemused by the amount of controversy this seems to cause as it seems mere common sense as far as I’m concerned. — Wayfarer
When is the case we'll be seeing something without a perspective and how will it compare to when we do have one? — Cheshire
How could you miss it? Yes, stepping back a bit helps. But, it isn't exclusive.If you want to see an object, you can’t see it if your face is pressed against it. — Wayfarer
How could you miss it? — Cheshire
Maybe, The way you see a being see you the way it sees you see it. — Cheshire
This may appear to be the case, but our knowing in itself may be quite different from our knowing as it appears to us.. — unenlightened
Yes, that's better than I imagined. I was thinking their was merit to challenging itself validity, but I wasn't sure how to demonstrate it properly. Well done. — Cheshire
It seems consistent with my experience of the world. I can imagine the things I can see and places I can be. I can also differentiate between the memory and experience.perhaps my knowledge/perception is the thing in myself, and and the object thereof is the thing outside myself. As if I contain a map, but the territory contains me. How's that for a radical philosophy? :cool: — unenlightened
It's all the same perspective at the end of the day. We pretend what we must look like to the mirror. But, there's no real other view to be described regardless of how many qualifications you stack on it. — Cheshire
I mean I'm at least two assertions deep in some speculation about material. My basis is that Wittgenstein was right, but there's easier ways to demonstrate ideas. Maybe, professional philosophers are so given to the assumption of the validity of it in itself statements they need a long leash to drag them through it at the time.Could it be the other way round too - because we're watching, the world pretends to be something it's not? :chin: Hmmmm. — TheMadFool
So far I've only claimed that I could give a name to thing outside of itself and others could then reason about it as a result. Confirming that we know ourselves as seen by the thing outside of itself point of view is problematic; now that some one has decided it is problematic. Up until this point it's been confirmed twice as viable; one poster even referencing quite a bit of work done on the topic. 1 dismissed the idea and another has offered some insightful speculations and a cartoon.Wait a minute so you being a thing inside of itself thinks that it can comprehend a thing outside of itself by using the thing inside itself to create something inside itself which is an idea and a concept of something that could be outside of itself. Do you see the contradiction here? — MAYAEL
propose the concept of the 'thing outside of itself'; as an extension to the thing in itself. — Cheshire
implying an error probably exist in the original notion of the thing in itself. — Cheshire
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