Overwhelmingly, we agree as to what is the case — Banno
We do not spend hours arguing about how many centimetres are in a metre or which city is the capital of Russia — Banno
Again, if what you say were true, one would not be able to make true statements. — Banno
Ok, we don't spend time arguing about whether the cup has a handle or the car has wheels. — Banno
It's an odd disconnect from reality, taught in first year philosophy. It's a test to see who amongst the students can see beyond such poor arguments to move to second year Philosophy. — Banno
. A thing-in-itself about which we can say nothing is vacant. Since we can say nothing about it, it cannot enter into our conversations. It's no more than word play, along the lines of the little man who wasn't there. — Banno
The question of scientific realism is one pretty much accepted as unanswerable. — Hanover
When someone else asks what size Dell is, they are not asking about your perceptions, they are asking about Dell. — Banno
Again, if what you say were true, one would not be able to make true statements.
— Banno
But I just demonstrated that is not the case, with the hologram example. — hypericin
The point here is about the choice of words in describing the situation. On the one hand we have the lie-to-children that says you are sitting in your head looking at the model presented to you by your sensorium, and can never "really" see stuff. Note the scare-word "really"....you can interact with, verify, the city outside the hologram. If all of your perceptions are an illusion, you cannot interact with the world at all, and there can be no independent verification. — Banno
They are talking about their perception. — Hanover
Truth a religious concept? Tell me the truth. Do you really believe that? — Cartuna
The point here is that you've got to assert faith in something at the end of the day, and even if it's something as basic as realism, such is still faith. — Hanover
If they were talking about their perceptions, then since your perception-of-Dell is distinct from their perception-of-Dell, you would never be able to talk about the same thing. — Banno
Frankly, the approach you are adopting strikes me as singularly bad for your mental health. — Banno
So I'm wondering how our senses can give evidence of something that we not only know nothing about, but can know nothing about. — Srap Tasmaner
I have a suspicion that the difference between our positions is more one of language than of content. — Banno
One reason this matters -- aside from whether you get mileage out of 'evidence' as a metaphor -- is that evidence is intelligible. Footprints are a natural sign; like other sorts of evidence they indicate something else in the world. Those sorts of connections make the world intelligible.
The issue here is a sort of sleight-of-hand: something defined as being unintelligible is introduced as if it were part of the intelligible world, like the airplane represented by a radar blip, or the flower represented by its scent. These are connections we are familiar with. Some of us even know something about how those connections work. Whatever we're attempting to say about the plane 'in itself' or the flower 'in itself', it's nothing like this. — Srap Tasmaner
What do you conclude from this? — frank
I can't make any sense of the version of Kant presented here. — Srap Tasmaner
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