So, yes, interest is devoid of will insofar as having an interest is not to will anything, nor is it the structure of will, which is reducible to pure practical reason. Accordingly, before anything is to be willed there must be an interest in the manner in which it is to be done, hence, interest in a principle which grounds the will’s determined volition.
However, desire takes no account of good in the attainment of its objects other than the satisfaction of the agent, but mere ‘feel good’ satisfaction can never be deemed truly moral behavior, which is ‘good’ in and of itself regardless of the feeling derived from it.
Yes, that’s true, and further instance of space/time conceptual irreconcilability of the two geniuses
there absolutely no way for a person to willfully obey a moral principle in and of itself without having a taste to do it. — Bob Ross
as a transcendental idealist, do you deny Einstein’s general/special relativity? — Bob Ross
Oh heck no. The science is good.
...
He stated for the record mathematics is discovered, but in fact I rather think the proofs of mathematical relations are discovered, but math, in and of itself, is a purely rational construction by, and manifestation of, human intelligence.
…..what you think of space/time fabric? — Bob Ross
……space and time are a posteriori (since we only understand them better via empirical investigation)? — Bob Ross
Are they still a priori insofar as they are forms of our experience….. — Bob Ross
…..but their behaviors are a posteriori? — Bob Ross
Long ways from moral realism, aren’t we?
It isn’t a fabric, it’s a mathematical model of a gravitational field under specific conditions. The Universe, reality in general, in and of itself….whatever there is that isn’t us…..doesn’t need space or time. We as calculating intelligences, do.
But then, the Universe doesn’t need mathematical models or gravitational fields either, so……
Thing is, we’re investigating objects a posteriori, in order to understand them better, not space or time.
Space and time don’t behave, don’t possess behavior.
I’ve just only ever heard of Einstein’s space/time as a fabric — Bob Ross
So, under your view, space curving and time dilating are not classified as behaviors? Then what are they classified as? — Bob Ross
It is documented that Einstein read philosophy, had favorites in it, but would he ever admit to taking a hint from Kant? Nahhhhh….I doubt it. But, there’s the two texts; make of it what you will.
... an enigma presents itself which in all ages has agitated inquiring minds. How can it be that mathematics, being after all a product of human thought which is independent of experience, is so admirably appropriate to the objects of reality? Is human reason, then, without experience, merely by taking thought, able to fathom the properties of real things?
In my opinion the answer to this question is, briefly, this: as far as the propositions of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain; and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality...
The effects of gravity on objects in space for the one; the difference in measurable durations relative to objects of significantly disparate velocities, for the other.
Einstein didn’t share Kant’s view that math is a priori certain…. — Bob Ross
All ‘a priori certain’ is meant to indicate, is if it comes from human understanding, for whatever is thought, it is impossible for that thought to not have occurred, which is the same as saying that thought is certain
From there, because both Kant and Einstein recognized mathematics is “a product of human thought”, it is for that reason, both a priori and certain
If Einstein held that math didn’t relate to reality with certainty, on what ground, then, did he actually invent mathematical propositions to explain certain aspects of it, re: w = c – v?
because that formula had no existence, had never been thought, and for which therefore there could be no possible experience, how is it not a priori?
Not an issue, really. Einstein didn’t approve of a priori mathematical certainty, merely because the content of the formulas he envisioned and constructed had no chance of being obtained in experience
Kant thought in consideration of his current time, in which his mathematical proofs were readily available without technical support; Einstein thought in consideration of times in which his ideas must wait for proofs, pending technological support. What…a scant three years for GR, but 35 for SR? Something like that.
The term “universality” in Kant meant wherever a human is, in Einstein it meant wherever the Universe is.
By “impossible for that thought to not have occurred”, you are referring to math being a necessary precondition for the possibility of experience? Otherwise, I am not sure I followed this part. — Bob Ross
In the quote I provided….. — Bob Ross
Is human reason, then, without experience, merely by taking thought, able to fathom the properties of real things?
”If Einstein held that math didn’t relate to reality with certainty, on what ground, then, did he actually invent mathematical propositions to explain certain aspects of it……
-Mww
Because he thought it could be empirically verified, not that the equations themselves, nor math in general was a priori certain. — Bob Ross
wouldn’t Einstein’s viewpoint be impossible under Kantianism, since there is no way to know anything about the viewpoint of the things-in-themselves (i.e., Universe)? — Bob Ross
But they weren’t obtained in experience….. — Bob Ross
Was there ever a thought you didn’t think?
Of course not, which is to say every thought of yours was both a priori and certain, which is its form. Now if the content of each thought is included, it follows necessarily that the object thought has the very same certainty as it relates to its form
All logic to be thought….which is all mathematics is…..needs its content verified empirically. So the opinion reduces to, mathematical propositions refer to understanding for their certainty, so they do not refer to reality, and, insofar as mathematical propositions refer to reality, it is not for the certainty of them, but for the empirical verification of their certainty, which is their proofs
How else does a thing get its properties, if the human thinker doesn’t decide what they are?
But that’s not quite right, in that Nature only showed him a thing of a certain shape, but not that it was round, which he came up with all by himself, and assigned that as a property inherent in things of that shape, without regard to whether he, or Nature, was its causality.
If Nature gave the properties of things to us along with the thing itself…..why do we assign spin to an elementary particle as a property of it, when spin as rotating mass has no relation to what spin as this property, is meant to indicate?
So, yes, human reason is the only means by which the properties of real things is fathomed.
That’s the cool thing about Einstein’s avant-guarde thought experiments: there is no way to empirically verify them
.the viewpoint of things-in-themselves doesn’t make any sense, insofar as things do not have a viewpoint;
(where X = homeostasis or health-fitness or sustainability, respectively).If X deprived of Y, then do Z in order to restore X by mitigating Y
If X deprived of Y, then do Z in order to restore X by mitigating Y
Whether or not one chooses to do a moral, or right, action (i.e. a hypothetical imperative to reduce harm) is no more "subjective" than whether or not one chooses to solve a mathematical equation because both are, I argue contra the OP, equally objective operations.
….these do not seem to be compatible views….. — Bob Ross
…..as if Kant is right then Einstein cannot take the viewpoint of ‘everything is relative’ since it speaks of the things-in-themselves—not the individuals’ experience. — Bob Ross
”So, yes, human reason is the only means by which the properties of real things is fathomed.
-Mww
It is a very, prima facie, appealing argument I must say; but it fails because the “proof” of reason actively determining things’ properties requires that the representations are somewhat accurate of the things-in-themselves, which, if Kant is right, there is no way to determine anything about them — Bob Ross
”that Nature only showed him a thing of a certain shape…..
-Mww
…..the ‘nature’ you refer to is reduced to….an incomprehensible nothing….which cannot be understood to even “show him a thing of a certain shape”. — Bob Ross
Einstein used mathematics to prove if there is a stationary clock here and a moving clock there, there must be a change relative only to the clocks but not as an experience of the subject, who only experiences the verification of the mathematical logic but not the relativity of the clock’s times to each other, which is a function of Nature alone without any regard whatsoever for principles of human reason.
Kant understood perfectly well if there was a clock here and a clock there, one moved and the other didn’t, there must be the experience of change in a perceiving subject, the change relative to the clocks themselves utterly irrelevant except as the representation of an internal logical human principle.
Furthermore, upon the successful exhibition of that which was formally only mathematical logic, makes necessary actual real things, which again removes the thing-in-itself objection, re: Hafele–Keating, 1971.
Representations are somewhat accurate….yes, but only of the sensations evoked in us of a thing, not a thing-in-itself
I figured you’d glean from “the properties of real things is fathomed” presupposes those properties, which makes explicit that which fathoms cannot be the source of that which is fathomed.
What….I can’t free-wheel with language, just a little? Nature doesn’t technically “show” me anything, but when things make their presence perceivable to me, are they not shown to me?
And why should Nature be an incomprehensible nothing? If I can think a conceivable representation then it is necessarily something, and it being a conception that doesn’t immediately contradict any other conception it must be comprehensible. Right?
Sorry for the dialectical delay.
But wouldn’t Einstein’s argument also be explained metaphysically as….. — Bob Ross
It seems like they are incompatible views, but Einstein’s empirically verified views can be reconciled with Kantianism insofar as one denies Einstein’s metaphysical views. — Bob Ross
….sensations are supposed to be the raw input of things-in-themselves…… — Bob Ross
But isn’t ‘nature’ the totality of the ‘things-in-themselves — Bob Ross
Only if by ‘nature’ your claims are restricted to the possibility of experience…. — Bob Ross
I think kantianism operates implicitly under the assumption that causality is not merely the pure forms of our intuition — Bob Ross
I don’t know why a Kantian would even think that they are “fathoming” properties of a thing-in-itself — Bob Ross
I’m ok with Nature being restricted to the possibility of experience.
Your namesake. The one I asked about awhile ago? One of his pieces just sold…….$9.8M.
…..how do you accept general/special relativity as a Kantian? — Bob Ross
(Nope. The thing impacts us)My exposition of Kantianism with regards to this representational process would be as follows:
1. The thing-in-itself “impacts” us. — Bob Ross
I’m not directly affected by, therefore care very little for, e.g., gravitational lensing and assorted SR/GR relations
For any object, your experience of it, how it is known/what it is know as by you, is predicated on your intelligence alone, the state or condition of the thing itself be as it may.
(Nope. The thing impacts us)
The “impact” trigger our receptivity and sensibility to receive and produce raw input of, within the limits of what it is capable of, the thing-in-itself.
3. The intuition and the understanding both process the raw input.
(Nope. Intuition processes the raw input, understanding processes the representations of the raw input. Intuition informs of the raw material of the thing; understanding informs that intuitions can or cannot have conceptions related to them.)
Yep, him. Although, upon closer inspection, it turns out $9.8M was the asking price, not the sale price. It was for “A Walk in the Woods”, 1971, currently held by a museum gallery, purchased from a legitimate former owner for….(gasp) $1000.
Even if it’s the same fence, your experience of it is different, which reduces to the fact all your experience is ever going to be, regarding that fence, is predicated on your perception of it, no matter who does what to it.
So….say the fence is a different color but you don’t drive by. How you gonna get an impression from the fence you didn’t drive by? Now it is that the condition of the fence changed but your experience of it didn’t.
…..time dilates even at the scale of our normal lives. — Bob Ross
…..it seems like, to me, we are saying the same thing. — Bob Ross
You seem to be (saying)…..sensations are what comprise the ‘thing’; whereas I am saying that the sensations are what comprise our limited knowledge of the thing-in-itself. Aren’t we saying the same thing? — Bob Ross
This sounds like the same thing I said….. — Bob Ross
…..why postulate a ‘thing’ then (on top of a thing-in-itself)? — Bob Ross
How do you even know there are two different faculties doing it? — Bob Ross
I don’t understand how this isn’t pure speculation…. — Bob Ross
how do you go about explaining that? — Bob Ross
This doesn't make sense to me: for the reason that you perceived it differently is exactly because someone did something to it. — Bob Ross
(for that case where the fence was repainted but I didn’t drive by) You didn't have a new experience of it that was different than your previous experience because you haven't experienced it again. Once you do, then it will have a different color. Are you talking about memories? — Bob Ross
A fact cannot be moral or immoral. Not for the reasons you are stating but by definition.
A fact is something known to exist or having occured. It may come from something that has been committed, but this is irrelevant; it does not define it. Facts can be also regarded as information, knowledge. We cannot say that an information or knowledge is moral or immoral, can we?
What can be moral or immoral is an act, a decision, speech, behavior, etc., i.e. things humans do. (Sometimes, lack of action (omissions) can be considered as immoral, i.e. when we should do something but we don't.)
Based on the above, and since "facts" are a central element in your description, I'm afraid I can't go any further, since it makes not sense to me. Sorry about that. :sad:
A fact cannot be moral or immoral. Not for the reasons you are stating but by definition.
A fact is something known to exist or having occured. It may come from something that has been committed, but this is irrelevant; it does not define it. Facts can be also regarded as information, knowledge. We cannot say that an information or knowledge is moral or immoral, can we?
Not in my inertial frame it doesn’t, hence, it is not an effect on me, hence I am not affected by it.
For what you said, I said “Nope”, which makes explicit we said very different things.
Think of the science. For every bee sting or sweet taste there is a difference between what the senses do and what the brain does. But the brain can do stuff even if the senses don’t, and, the senses can do stuff the brain doesn’t recognize.
We just love to say we KNOW the car is in the garage for no other reason than that’s where we left it. But it is an illegitimate claim, lacking any empirical warrant whatsoever. And THAT, my friend, is NOT speculative.
From my personal, well-worn armchair, this makes no sense at all…..
Simplest explanation which says it all….if one likes K he won’t like S and if he likes S he won’t like K
Throw enough metaphysical reductionism at “memory” you arrive at “consciousness”, right?
Thanks.This is very good. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I do not see a basis for "the epistemic challenge". Consider my more explanatory post linked at the top of the post to which you've respondedBut there is the epistemic challenge of "how do we come to know the good?"
What do you mean by "taking it as axiomatic"? I take it by definition. How else could one take it? Figuratively?if you take it as axiomatic that facts cannot be moral, then you can't have moral facts. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I don't know what does "facts of the matter" mean, but if it means "states of affairs", i.e. situations, this is a little tricky, or a more subtle case. Because morality may be indeed be involved in a situation, but the situation itself cannot ne moral or immoral. What is happening in the situation can. E.g. drug dealing is immoral, but the situation of drug dealing is a fact. It cannot be considered immoral. See, morality has to do with acts, activity action. A situation is not itself an activity. It is a context, a frame of reference, concerning activities that happen in it. I don't know if this makes sense to you.the term facts, or "facts of the matter" often refer to states of affairs which can be assigned a moral ranking. — Count Timothy von Icarus
There. You are talking too about acts, that can be good or bad and that bring about sates of affairs. See, "bring about" means they result into, they produce something. Can that something be moral or immoral? Or only the actions that led to that something?I could see an argument that acts are only good or bad in virtue of the fact that we expect said acts to bring about states of affairs that are more or less just/good (and indeed I think this is a fairly common view in moral philosophy, consequentialism and all). In which case, the morality of the facts is the key player here, the morality of acts is derivative of that. — Count Timothy von Icarus
[/quote]the morality of the facts is the key player here, the morality of acts is derivative of that. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.