Outstanding critique. Well-thought, and asks pertinent questions, not all of which have answers. — Mww
.what happens in the very first instance of a perception or an idea in a particular human cognitive system? By first instance I mean the very first observation of something in Nature, or the very first flash of a possibility a priori? The implicit ramification being of course, there is no experience on which to draw, therefore there is nothing in memory, re: consciousness, therefore the representation by already present conceptions is quite impossible. — Mww
This is why the Aristotelian description was that the mind abstracts the form of the thing, through the means of the senses. — Metaphysician Undercover
The categorization of the particular according to an already held conceptual structure, isn’t the same as conceptualizing the particular sensation. — Mww
Abstracts….from what? The thing itself? This presupposes the form is already contained in the sensation, and that the senses have some sort of self-contained deductive power. I usually resort to the ol’ tickle on the back of your neck scenario to refute such description. A tickle is a sensation, and if the form of the thing which causes the tickle is abstracted from it, it would seem we would know immediately what causes the tickle. But we do not. In fact, it is the case we sometimes sense a tickle not caused by any object at all. — Mww
There is a form belonging to any sensed object which becomes known as a certain thing, but it is not abstracted through sense, but resides a priori in the mind. This also relates to the question as to what do you do in the case of first instances.
Again….lots of what you say I agree with, but I can’t see an answer to the original question in it. — Mww
The particular is never conceptualized. — Metaphysician Undercover
You might call the senses information collecting tools. — Metaphysician Undercover
The information is received as formal, but it consists of forms created by something other than the mind which receives it, so the meaning inherent within must be interpreted — Metaphysician Undercover
And the mind receiving creates its own meaning according to what it knows in its interpretation. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the act of abstraction which occurs in the feeling of a sensation as per you example of a tickle, is an act of creation within the receiving mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
The mind classifies the information received, according to conceptions which it already has, and creates what appears to you as a conception of that particular instance. — Metaphysician Undercover
But it is really just a particular instance of categorization, whereby the essentials are determined and a representation of a particular is produced. — Metaphysician Undercover
When you come into the room and see a chair, where there was a similar chair yesterday, you tend to think it is the same chair. — Metaphysician Undercover
The form of the sensed object inheres within the thing itself — Metaphysician Undercover
What is a priori in the mind is some structure of universals by which the mind categorizes incoming information. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the form of the thing which the mind knows is fundamentally different from the form which inheres within the thing itself, as a representation produced from placing the information within the conceptual structure. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is no problem with "first instances" so long as we maintain the reality of the a priori which exists prior to the first instance, and makes the first instance possible. — Metaphysician Undercover
No? Then what is? And what of the notion that all thoughts are singular and succession, which implies any thought is itself a particular instance of it? All conceptions are thought, so….. — Mww
It is still logical that a sensation now is of the same thing as the sensation is of that thing at a later time. — Mww
Compromise: if we say my transferring is your collecting, I might still be inclined to grant intuition is the collecting tool, in that the matter of an object from which sensation proper arises, is represented as an empirical intuition. Dunno if that works for you. — Mww
You might, I would not. I would limit the senses to information transferring devices, the information already residing in the things perceived. There isn’t any information collected per se, it is, rather, merely that which the mind employs as the instantiation of its methods. — Mww
Ok, so what something other than the mind creates forms? And if the information contains inherent meaning within it, what does understanding do? How is this not precisely the materialist doctrine writ large? — Mww
Ok, the mind abstracts meaning inherent within forms received as information, according to what it knows. But once again….what if the mind doesn’t know? Why would the mind create its own meaning, if there is already meaning inherent in the forms? Although, I’m beginning to see where your notion that judgement being the source of error, as I hold it to be, is not the case. I’m not sure it is legitimate to permit the mind to misinterpret, that is, mistake the meaning inherent in forms with the meaning it creates for itself. — Mww
This works for objects received more than once. In other words, objects known to the mind as experience, re: according to conceptions which it already has. — Mww
Consider the alternative, wherein the mind classifies in accordance with conceptions it already has…..how is it determinable that none of them represent the forms inherent in the information it received? — Mww
OK. This is better, in that conceptualization is really categorization, in which the essentials are determined. Now, the mind can certainly interpret the information contained in forms in accordance with categories it already has, and the categories are themselves conceptions, but of a very specific gender and origin. But no particular instance of an object of sense is ever to be conceptualized from a mere category. Th essentials determined by categorization, are necessary conditions for the possibility of knowing what an object may be in general, not properties for determining what it is in particular. — Mww
There is certainly still a problem, in that the a priori which exists prior to the first instance, the categorizing conceptual structure, and any instance at all, doesn’t have anything to do with the determination of what that thing is, only that knowing what it is, is possible from them. — Mww
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