Is this appeal to our psychological limitations appropriate for a transcendental argument?Arithmetical propositions are therefore always synthetical, of which we may become more clearly convinced by trying large numbers.
What does Kant mean here? This paragraph was very confusing to me.Some few principles preposited by geometricians are, indeed, really analytical, and depend on the principle of contradiction. They serve, however, like identical propositions, as links in a chain of method, not as principles [...] What causes us here to commonly believe that the predicate of such apodeictic judgements is already contained in our conception, and that the judgement is therefore analytical, is merely the equivocal nature of the expression.
What does Kant mean here? This paragraph was very confusing to me. — darthbarracuda
Mathematical judgements are always synthetical — Mww
Some simple ones are 100 or 99 per cent synthetic and the more complex they get the greater the analytical proportion of it. — Fine Doubter
surely it was always obvious that maths is an ideal / a fiction / an approximation? — Fine Doubter
numbers in Nature ... sets of sets of sets — Mww
There are numbers in Nature in the form of recursions — Fine Doubter
I understand Transcendental as "before experience or prior to experience", and Aesthetic as "sensory perception" in the CPR. So, transcendental aesthetic denotes a priori sensory perception or knowledge, which are non experiential sensory perception or knowledge .i.e. metaphysical perception or knowledge such as on God and Souls. — Corvus
26. Why does thought always involve limitation? — darthbarracuda
IV. The object of God (which can never be an object of intuition to us [25]) must have spontaneous intuitions as his only means of cognition, since thought always involves limitation [26]. — darthbarracuda
I think transcendental has different meanings depending on the context. There seem to be at least two different meanings: — darthbarracuda
What I don't get is how one can envision a plurality of intuitions that are unlimited, or infinite. Quantity is always finite, limited. And plurality entails quantity - hence a multitude of finite intuitions, since they're quantifiable. — javra
I think transcendental has different meanings depending on the context. There seem to be at least two different meanings:
Knowledge pertaining not to objects, but with the mode in which we perceive objects; as opposite of empirical, which pertains to objects of experience. Basically a "meta" discourse.
That which is independent of the conditions of human sensibility.
But in general, the term transcendental is connected to the conditions of human sensibility. The pure forms of human sensibility are transcendentally ideal, and the thing-in-itself is transcendentally real.
I don't know if I would describe transcendental as before or prior to experience. That would just be a priori, I think. The Transcendental Aesthetic is one part of the general question, "how are synthetic a priori judgements possible?", and it focuses on the conditions of sensibility, whereas the Transcendental Logic focuses on the conditions of thought. — darthbarracuda
1. Immediate merely indicates systemic successions. Everything starts somewhere. — Mww
Given to us here means that which we do not give to ourselves. That which is a perception vs that which is merely thought. — Mww
Space is an intuition....a pure intuition only....because it is considered to be the necessary condition for the experience of objects. Space is a conception insofar as it must first be thought as both justified for, and logically consistent with, the role it plays in a theoretical system. If space could not be thought, it could never be a conception. — Mww
Extension is shape, neither extension nor shape is a property of black. Space doesn’t have shape, insofar as all parts of space are each themselves just space, and the shape of objects is merely the limits of the space it is in. To imply space as black or that black is extended, are a transcendental illusions of mischaracterized reason. — Mww
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.