What is the "referent" for the term "noumenon"? — jancanc
the referent of a noumena is the unknown something that causes such an appearance. — RussellA
However, is there a contradiction if we talk of a "something" (i.e., a "thing"), since noumenon is not an object for a subject...even if we replace "thing" with "reality", "an existence,"...still it must be a reality/existence for a perceiving subject? — jancanc
What is the "referent" for the term "noumenon"?
Can it have a referent?
Kant states that the noumenon is objectless (and also subjectless) beyond space, time and causality,
so how can there be any referent for "noumenon"?
if it is a concept, is it not then an object of thought? but if the noumenon is not an object, then we have contradicted ourselves... — jancanc
Perhaps, the "noumenon", that Kant distinguishes from a material object, is merely a mental concept (an idealization of the physical object). In Charles Pinter's book, subtitled How the Mind Creates the Features & Structure of All Things . . . ., he discusses the human "sensorium" in great detail. He says that body & mind are engaged in a two-way dialog : the sensory organs transmit coded data (about an object) which the Mind (mental function of brain) interprets into self-relevant Meanings. As far as the idealistic Mind is concerned, the immaterial function (purpose ; meaning) of the object is more important than its material substance. Yet, the idea refers (points) back to the object, and the object reminds us of the idea.What is the "referent" for the term "noumenon"?
Can it have a referent?
Kant states that the noumenon is objectless (and also subjectless) beyond space, time and causality,
so how can there be any referent for "noumenon"?
if it is a concept, is it not then an object of thought? but if the noumenon is not an object, then we have contradicted ourselves... — jancanc
how can there be any referent for "noumenon"? — jancanc
The doctrine of sensibility is also the doctrine of noumena in the negative sense, that is, of things which the understanding is obliged to cogitate apart from any relation to our mode of intuition, consequently not as mere phenomena, but as things in themselves. But the understanding at the same time comprehends that it cannot employ its categories for the consideration of things in themselves, because these possess significance only in relation to the unity of intuitions in space and time, and that they are competent to determine this unity by means of general à priori connecting conceptions only on account of the pure ideality of space and time. — CPR, Of the Ground of the Division of all Objects into Phenomena and Noumena
If only objects of the senses, that is those things which appear to us are things in themselves…… — Janus
If only objects of the senses, that is those things which appear to us (….), would space, time, causality and the perceiving subject be noumena, according to Kant? — Janus
Things that appear to us, cannot be things as they are in themselves. Upon affecting us, things are no longer in or of themselves. — Mww
Causality is a derivative manifestation of a category, which is a conception but not one understanding thinks on its own accord, insofar as it arises from a transcendental deduction of reason, the faculty of principles, so also does not meet the criteria for noumena. — Mww
‘Tis a wicked game we play, innit? With our opinions? — Mww
... the main tendency of twentieth- and early twenty-first-century AngloAmerican commentary on the Critique of Pure Reason has been to downplay Kant’s metaphysical commitments, particularly his conception of the noumena (‘things in themselves’) as objects of a divine ‘intellectual intuition’ whose unavailability to human beings defines the limits of human understanding. For the most part, AngloAmerican commentary has viewed the Critique as a critique of metaphysics written in defence of empirical knowledge, rather than as a renovation of metaphysics designed to tether the empirical sciences to transcendental principles of intelligibility and morality. Such commentary has typically sought to confine Kant’s own philosophy within the limits of empirical experience, treating the transcendental intelligences or noumena as an abyss from which the eyes of philosophical understanding must be averted at all costs. From this winnowing reception has emerged a Kant for whom there are not two worlds — the sensible and the intelligible — only ‘two viewpoints’ on a single spatio-temporal world, as if the noumenon were simply a particular kind of conceptual abstraction applied to empirical things. This is a Kant for whom the last vestige of the noumenal — the power of empirically unconditioned moral choice — is viewed not as testimony to a self-acting intelligible or rational being within us, but only as a viewpoint that ordinary phenomenal agents should adopt for the purposes of acting autonomously. — Ian Hunter, Spirituality and Philosophy in Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason
For the most part, AngloAmerican commentary has viewed the Critique as a critique of metaphysics written in defence of empirical knowledge, rather than as a renovation of metaphysics designed to tether the empirical sciences to transcendental principles of intelligibility and morality. — Ian Hunter, Spirituality and Philosophy in Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason
can you give me an example of anything that would be classed as noumenal? — Janus
can you give me an example of anything that would be classed as noumenal? — Janus
can you give me an example of any kind of thing that would be classed as noumenal? — Janus
So, it seems noumena belong to an empty set, which cannot even be named or categorized? — Janus
Good question. The answer is...
Who the fuck knows. — T Clark
I can relate to that. But if multiplicity depends on naming and cannot exist without it, then it would certainly seem to follow that, unless animals practice naming, there can be no multiplicity for them—then should we pity the poor impoverished fuckers? — Janus
So, it seems noumena belong to an empty set, which cannot even be named or categorized? — Janus
…..it may be possible to give an example of some kind of thing. — Janus
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