"In principle" there is not any fact of the matter that can make the statement true. At most, it's a supposition expressed (confusedly) in a declarative, or categorical, form (as philosophers are wont to do).Let's take one of your previous examples (of a philosophical statement that you say is non-propositional): "Consciousness is fundamentaltoreality"^^. Are you saying that, in principle, that statement is not truth-apt? — Bob Ross
Yes, of course.Are you, likewise, saying it is a non-cognitive statement?
"In principle" there is not any fact of the matter that can make the statement true. At most, it's a supposition expressed (confusedly) in a declarative, or categorical, form (as philosophers are wont to do).
Who? You raised the issue. Who else? Yes, I was saying because you never added content to logic, maybe that is your point on logic? My use of Logic was always full of content. — Corvus
That is my own point on Philosophical methodology. If you want examples, read up on Philosophy of Language, or any Analytic Philosophy. — Corvus
So what? Logic is about the form, not the content, but I haven't denied that thought processes and arguments, whether logically valid or not, have content. Try to address what I'm actually saying and not what you imagine I'm saying, and the conversation might improve — Janus
If you cannot present your own ideas in your own words, and address what I'm actually saying instead of strawman versions, instead of giving me unwanted reading advice and misinterpreting, whether deliberately or not, my words, then responding to you is a waste of time and energy. — Janus
…..three note-worthy points:
1. There is a world (independent of 'me');
2. There is an 'I' (or 'me') which is in that world; and
3.There is a distinction between my experience of and the world itself.
Firstly, all three of these are transcendent claims assumed as true….. — Bob Ross
More distortions...you're doubling down on your ignorance, clutching at straws...time wasting. — Janus
While there may indeed be different types of logic, I would still ask, which type of logic has its content already given? — Mww
….what you meant by logic is "contentless"? — Corvus
I can still agree that logic is contentless, under the presupposition that logic, as such, is only a methodological form in itself. — Mww
Logic is possible to be studied, but wouldn't be useful for the practical uses in the real world. — Corvus
…your view on logic is too narrow. — Corvus
Logic is possible to be studied, but wouldn't be useful for the practical uses in the real world. — Corvus
Regarding Kantian general and transcendental logic, these are merely differences in the source of the representations contained in our cognitions. The former is with respect to the relations of a priori cognitions themselves to each other, regardless of the source of the representations contained therein, while the latter regards only those relations which have only to do with what makes a priori cognition possible. So while they technically are different types of logic, they still abide by the same rules of logic, which reduces to the congruency of relations of representations even in different types of cognition. — Mww
Exactly right. Logic, the critical method, is useless for knowing, but categorically necessary for making things known. — Mww
Contentless logic is a pseudo logic, or logic in just a shell with no meaning. — Corvus
any meaning it has is a logical consequence of the inputs to the logic, and the inputs are not logic. — wonderer1
Might that be because you equate "logic" with "thought"? — wonderer1
That seems different from my understanding of General and Transcendental logic in Kant. — Corvus
My thoughts on Logic is that, contents is the precondition of thoughts, and thoughts is the precondition of Logic. Therefore, without content, Logic is impossible. Contentless logic is pseudo logic, or logic in just a shell with no meaning. — Corvus
…the world of reason…. — Corvus
As for meaning, logic in itself, as a function of understanding, has to do with establishment of non-contradictory judgements alone. As with the concrete pad, empirical meaning can never arise without the a priori elimination of contradictions. — Mww
Out of curiosity, what does that mean to you? — Mww
Also, you were going to tell me which type of logic has its content already contained in it. — Mww
So, you don’t think the property of ‘being able to sit on it’ is mind-independent? — Bob Ross
No. This case, and other cases of manifest reality are mind dependent. Being able to sit on is a mental construction as are the things we designate as "sittable".
I don't believe this applies to atoms and particles. — Manuel
Do you mean that the property of sittable-ness is a construction of human minds? — frank
But we still learn a posteriori whether a thing has this property? Or is it a priori? — frank
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