But would it also be abstracted from space. time, mass, shape, number, relation and so on? — John
f there is a God, and if He has a view, then it would seem that it must consist in the sum total of the views of all His creatures. — John
Do something about it !?
Like what, cryogenically freeze myself for millennia until the triviality of modern civilization has melted away? Only problem there is that humans 1k+ years from now would have no reason to wake me up in the same way that advanced aliens have no reason to presently contact us... — VagabondSpectre
(Y) But it depends on how far your influence can reach and thus the arrow of time can easily be shortened. Never underestimate the power you have as a good and intelligent man with a strong voice. There have been many and in that passion have influenced huge changes, even if they come from very humble backgrounds. Don't get disillusioned.What bothers me isn't that the world is facing trivial problems, it's that what comes afterward is sure to be much more interesting and current climates are a source of delay. My contribution is to spread awareness of problems and possible solutions as I see them, and that's appropriate for my station, but no amount of hard work or dedication will get me to the other side of them. The only way there is through time. — VagabondSpectre
Kant does not, so far as I can tell, have arguments for the position that we can't get outside of our faculties. To be sure that's something he says many times. That might be because of my unfamiliarity with, or lack of understanding of, the text. But I've read CPR, so if I'm too stupid even to find that there are arguments, I don't know what reading again would help me to do.
Kant's style is generally one of outlining and repetition – he's more like a world-builder than an arguer. He does provide a few arguments, such as the refutation of idealism, and some truncated syllogisms about why representations of things cannot be things in themselves. But the broad picture seems to be one of making a big frame, repeating it, and letting the reader acclimate themselves.
This sounds close to Berkeley's idealism. What I gather from your interpretation of Kant is that the following philosophical positions are wrong: Materialism, essentialism and realism qua universals.
If essentialism or real universals were the case, then we would have a way of matching our conceptions with the way the world is. If materialism were the case, then there would be a way to world was, independent of how we or any creature thinks about it or perceives it. — Marchesk
From this it certainly does not follow that substance is material; it has infinite attributes, remember. For the same reasons it obviously does not follow that substance is mental, either. — John
I don't see how essentialism or real universals being the case would enable us to match our experience directly with anything beyond it. — John
How could we know that essentialism or real universal "are the case", for a start. I'm not sure what that could even mean. — John
One way of thinking about what I'm saying is that your reading of philosophy may be more fruitful if you do not approach a text with the presupposition that its author is a genius, as we're generally taught. — The Great Whatever
then say someone like Wittgenstein, who ultimately I think ended up wasting everyone's time by piling a series of retarded aphorisms on the tradition that now everyone has to write Ph.D. theses about, forever. Yet Wittgenstein is 'the genius,' and for that reason, more of an idiot. — The Great Whatever
What is the error that led Wittgenstein to think this? — Marchesk
The linguistic view of philosophy is stupid. Questions about the ocean are not questions about the word 'ocean' – why anyone would think this about knowledge, truth, and so on is something we should diagnose as a historical error in reasoning, not as a philosophical position we take seriously. — The Great Whatever
but I think it is wrong to say that Kant was accidentally re-doing Locke for an audience who didn't know him — csalisbury
We're always least kind to those positions we once held tenaciously but have recently come to disavow. It's a solipsistic kernel in Kant you're objecting, to, right? — csalisbury
It would seem that both trap us in a world of human perceptions and thoughts. And yet the world continues to surprise us. — Marchesk
1. We might not be alone in the universe. — Marchesk
2. The world is much bigger and older than we are.
3. It sounds like the reverse of the Copernican revolution, which removed us from center of the universe. Everything in science has dethroned humans as being central to creation, and yet many philosophers would put us back at the center when it comes to knowledge.
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