my point stands re anthropomorphizing, and we are apparently in agreement about knowledge outside human experience being impossible. — Janus
I mean that the insistence of ideas like, one cannot conceive of a thoughtless world, retain all of their authority. — Constance
All that's left to do is make systematic guesses, oui? Without the possibility of ever knowing whether we go it right or no. — Agent Smith
You misread my meaning again, sir. Kant's anthropocentric fiat isn't even false (i.e. metaphysical, and in the manner to which he objects) as evident by knowledge derived through fundamental particle physics / astrophysics, evolutionary molecular biology, pure mathematics (e.g. Lie Groups, Number Theory, Axiomatic Set Theory), as examples, which we cannot perceive directly (via "intuition") and are "beyond" human experience. The CPR is a masterpiece of metaphysical (subjectivist) fiction IMHO. — 180 Proof
I should note that for writers like Heidegger, Derrida and some of the phenomenologists, the notion of the human is presupposed but is instead a derived abstraction. From their vantage framing metaphysics in terms of what is within or outside of human experience is already anthropocentric because it begins from the notion of the human subject. nModern empirical science, including physics, is anthropocentric for this reason. The transcendental starting point for these authors is not yet a human subjectivity Even though it is a kind of subject, it does t lend itself to a dichotomy between what is experienced from a human point view and what is outside of it. — Joshs
Yes. They presume a definition of subjectivity as if it is self evident. Is a subject merely a biological entity? — Jackson
Look to the fallibilists like Peirce, Dewey, Russell, Wittgenstein, Popper, Feyerabend, Haack, Deutsch, Taleb for how we (can) learn/know reliably. — 180 Proof
That is the fallacy of scientism. Making systematic guesses is science's job. But philosophy's "guesses" are thematically different. — Constance
But where do they get their authority from , for the later Wittgenstein? I would suggest only through a particular language game in which that sentence is being used. Its authority would thus be contingent and pragmatic.
The above sentence , for instance, would be a tautology that doesn’t actually tell us anything — Joshs
Could you please elaborate on that claim. — Agent Smith
But affectivity, ethics, this kind of thing is inherently what matters, even if I don't have a language to say what it is. even if I were, as Foucault put it, being ventriloquized by history, there is this foundation of actuality that has a palpable "presence", beyond what a language game can say. Witt said in Nature and Culture that "the good" was his idea of divinity. — Constance
Do you have a reference? I'd be interested in reading more.
— T Clark
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5972154/ — Joshs
Are emotions just expressed is socially significant ways or, as Wittgenstein shows , is their very sense created via these contextual engagements? Putting into words wouldnt merely be relating symbols to already formed meanings but allowing the worlds to form the sense of a meaning. — Joshs
I'm not sure what this means, but I believe that things don't mean anything until they are put into words. That's what meaning means. — T Clark
Can not actions, visuals, concepts have meaning even when not put into words? — PhilosophyRunner
Does art have meaning? — PhilosophyRunner
rt is a language like words. Language is meaningful, unless you write a poem for the sake of words. — Haglund
Is that all that language does is ‘say’ what ‘is’? Doesn’t language PRODUCE what is rather than merely express an already extant ‘it’?
— Joshs
No. That's not how it normally works. Ideas form, language follows. It sets ideas free. — Haglund
Interesting. Aside from art, I would consider actions to also have meaning. Take body language.
I guess you would say that body language has no meaning until it has been put into words? I will have to mull over that a bit more. — PhilosophyRunner
In college I came up with a way of understanding f the world that I have been elaborating ever since. But it took my 5 years before I was able to write a single word to articulate it. What I had in those first 5 years was certainly conceptualized, but it was not verbalized. I would describe this form of knowing as like an impressionistic sketch.In my view, experiences are just experiences until they are conceptualized, put into words. Until then, they have no meaning. As I see it, art has no meaning, although many disagree with that — T Clark
This is the position I am closest to. I would go further and say actions and concepts are also languages that have meaning, like words. — PhilosophyRunner
The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis is no more respected as it once was. There's been a ton of writing and empirical work on this hypothesis. Most people no longer think strong versions of it are true (i.e. it seems like people's thoughts are not deeply constrained by their native language). But weaker versions of it are still, I think, being debated. — Haglund
I should note that for writers like Heidegger, Derrida and some of the phenomenologists, the notion of the human is presupposed but is instead a derived abstraction. From their vantage framing metaphysics in terms of what is within or outside of human experience is already anthropocentric because it begins from the notion of the human subject. nModern empirical science, including physics, is anthropocentric for this reason. The transcendental starting point for these authors is not yet a human subjectivity Even though it is a kind of subject, it does t lend itself to a dichotomy between what is experienced from a human point view and what is outside of it. — Joshs
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