Kant acknowledged that a priori judgements come after experience. — Janus
It's on the cut itself where physical causation meets logical necessity. — Hillary
The outside of the physical world is projected continuously into a mental counterpart on the other side. It's on the cut itself where physical causation meets logical necessity. — Hillary
Kant acknowledged that a priori judgements come after experience. — Janus
I think Kant means the validity of a priori judgements are demonstrated by experience.
“....The possibility of experience is, then, that which gives objective reality to all our à priori cognitions....”
An a priori judgement is an a priori cognition, insofar as a judgement is the synthesis of representations from which a cognition follows. As such, then, an a priori judgement is valid iff a possible experience may follow from it. All this is intended to show, is that we can synthesize all the representations we want, but if they don’t lead to an experience, or a possible experience, they are generally useless. Or what he calls “without sense or meaning”. Which is the conventional way of describing the ever-dreadful transcendental illusion.
We’ve been here before, and honestly, I can’t find anything to substantiate Kant’s acknowledgement as you’ve posited it. I’d understand if you’ve no wish to pursue this line of disagreement; to each his own, etc, etc..... — Mww
A priori means before experience, or a condition of experience. — Jackson
Give me one example of a logical necessity. I can point to a natural process corresponding to it. — Hillary
You place the "cause" of the sense impression in the external object, rather than within the human being, and you conclude that the "impression I get from an object is determined by that object". The human body is very finely tuned, and a slight alteration in the chemical balance will change the sense impressions greatly. — Metaphysician Undercover
The human body receives information from the object, but it is this human body which creates, and determines the impression, not the external object. — Metaphysician Undercover
A Chimera (from Greek mythology) can magically teleport itself or it cannot. — javra
A quantum particle hops non-locally between different position, within the bounds of the wavefunction. — Hillary
Seems like a bit of a non sequitur ... Can you either cite references of this being "the magical teleportation of quantum particles which they willfully enact" or else independently provide rational evidence for the same? — javra
The delayed-choice quantum erasure as just one example which I'm personally astounded by. — javra
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