Consider them as synonyms of unclear. — Angelo Cannata
I have a rule not to reply to Meta, it's not worth one's while. — Banno
The Principle of Relativity is that the laws of physics must be the same for every observer. — Banno
The "way things are" is the same for all observers. — Banno
Anyway, back to ignoring Meta. — Banno
What do you mean exactly by "directly interact" ?
I think it's the concepts being unclear which makes them more universal than other concepts and as such more useful for understanding the universal, which, at least according to you, is the object of study of philosophy — Hello Human
Do you mean that it might be that physical universe (external world) would not exist if you or I or the entire human species did not exist?I have no idea at all. I don't think we can ever know for sure. — Hello Human
Within this quote is all that I fear about idealism.
Note how every instantiation of idealism is also a tool of power. — Isaac
So we might have social constructions around pots, clay, even atoms, but the the distributions of those constructs will be bound by the parameters of the data from outside the Markov Blanket — Isaac
I suppose what is happening here, Joshs, is the discussion where the idealist insists that it is words all the way down, while the realist points out that the words are about something that is not just words.
My own suspicion, in line with Davidson, is that both are roughly true. So my favourite quote from the very end of On the very idea of a conceptual scheme:
In giving up dependence on the concept of an uninterpreted reality, something outside all schemes and science, we do not relinquish the notion of objective truth -quite the contrary — Banno
“If you talk to a chemist, “real” is a molecule, an atom, a proton. To a physicist, “real” is a quark, a Higgs boson, or maybe a collection of little strings vibrating in eleven dimensions. — Joshs
In giving up dependence on the concept of an uninterpreted reality, something outside all schemes and science, we do not relinquish the notion of objective truth - quite the contrary. — Davidson
Your argument is that we encounter statements directly because it's nonsense to say it's indirect. — Tate
Now apply that to the rest of the things around you. What can we make of "we immediately experience only our own existence, but can only infer that of outer things"?
As if you sat there ratiocinating that the thing under you is a chair. As if that were a deduction... — Banno
If you insist that the real world consists of what you're most directly aware of, that is a kind of idealism. — Tate
“Idealism is the opinion that we immediately experience only our own existence, but can only infer that of outer things (which inference from effect to cause is in fact uncertain)” (Kant 2005: 294). — Joshs
Quick question about Kant. His Transcendental Idealism seems to be based on epistemological grounds, right? In other words, he says there is a reality out there (noumena) but we do not know it, or have access to it and we perceive a world constructed by mentation, that is generated through noumena, but not necessarily like it at all (clumsy wording, I know) — Tom Storm
The reading bit is about raising the point that perhaps distinctions such as direct, indirect, internal, external, subjective, objective, realist and idealist are inadequate to the task set in the OP. Perhaps they misdirect us. — Banno
I don't see Kant as an indirect realist, because (unlike Locke) he doesn't posit ideas as representations. But his transcendental idealism is very elusive, hardly anyone seems to grasp it - the usual response is nearly always that he (and all idealists) are saying that the world is 'merely' or 'only' 'in the mind'. — Wayfarer
And I think that sense of the unknown, and the corollary of the inherently limited nature of what we know, is fundamental to understanding Kant. It's not exactly scepticism, but it's also not unqualified realism. — Wayfarer
The difference between abstract and intuitive cognition, which Kant entirely overlooks, was the very one that ancient philosophers indicated as φαινόμενα [phainomena] and νοούμενα [nooumena]; the opposition and incommensurability between these terms proved very productive in the philosophemes of the Eleatics, in Plato's doctrine of Ideas, in the dialectic of the Megarics, and later in the scholastics, in the conflict between nominalism and realism. This latter conflict was the late development of a seed already present in the opposed tendencies of Plato and Aristotle. But Kant, who completely and irresponsibly neglected the issue for which the terms φαινομένα and νοούμενα were already in use, then took possession of the terms as if they were stray and ownerless, and used them as designations of things in themselves and their appearances.
The idea that the soul/psyche/intellect 'becomes one' or is united with the object of knowledge has ancient provenance.) — Wayfarer
The entire experience lasted perhaps one minute, and it changed me forever. My relationship with the world had always been as a separate observer perceiving the universe as outside myself and disconnected from me. What made this event astonishing was its impossible perspective because I was both the experiencer and the experience. I was simultaneously the observer of the world and the world. I was the world observing itself! I was concurrently knowing that the world is made of a substance that feels like love, and that I am that substance!
The reading bit is about raising the point that perhaps distinctions such as direct, indirect, internal, external, subjective, objective, realist and idealist are inadequate to the task set in the OP. Perhaps they misdirect us. — Banno
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