To Kant, though, is reserved the claim that there is, e.g., some thing which I call a chair and sit on all the time, which although it is in all respects a chair as I understand a chair to be and I use it as such, cannot be known. — Ciceronianus
this adventure in the preposterous — Ciceronianus
the remarkably silly task — Ciceronianus
which although it is in all respects a chair as I understand a chair to be and I use it as such, cannot be known — Ciceronianus
e all have the concept of a chair in our minds, and we only know what a chair is because in our minds is the concept of a chair. — RussellA
We'd have no concept of a chair but for the fact that, as living organisms of a particular kind in an environment, we found it useful and desirable to sit on something different from the ground or a natural object, and we call what results from that a "chair." — Ciceronianus
Is it "metaphysics" or just the lazy habit of reifying abstractions? — 180 Proof
In your opinion, then, what accounts for the fact that thousands of first-rate philosophers have taken D & K seriously, devoted enormous scholarship and brainpower to investigating the pluses and minuses of the Cartesian/Kantian tradition, built upon this tradition to explore many modern philosophical questions, etc.? — J
1. There is experience, therefore something exists.
2. That something, or a part of it, must be producing experience.
3. The unified parts of that something which are producing it is the ‘I’.
4. The ‘I’ can only produce experience through (data) input (i.e., sensibility).
5. The production of experience via sensibility (and whatever may afterwards interpret such sensibility) entails that one’s experience is a representation.
Thusly, science (and the like) are pragmatic for paradigmatic and not ontological purposes.
the intelligence of philosophers was bewitched by means of language, as Wittgenstein said — Ciceronianus
My purpose is of course to try to restore metaphysics' reputation to a certain extent. — Leontiskos
Here's a small chance, a chink in the wall of Kant*. What if talk of the cup perceived and of the cup's ding an sich are talk of the very same thing? Perhaps there is just one cup?Realism doesn’t entail there is one cup in the sense that you outlined. If we sense objects, then it is meaningful and correct to say that there is a cup-in-itself and a cup-that-we-perceive because there is a gap between them. — Bob Ross
* Yes, that's a Kant/cant joke. — Banno
I would say there is no "thing" called a concept floating about in a thing called a "mind." Concepts and minds all exist in the same world as chairs. What we call "concepts" are a consequence of our interaction with the world of which we're a part. We'd have no concept of a chair but for the fact that, as living organisms of a particular kind in an environment, we found it useful and desirable to sit on something different from the ground or a natural object, and we call what results from that a "chair." — Ciceronianus
I don't think it was under threat, at least not from me. Metaphysics is inevitable. But I lack your forbearance. — Banno
Metaphysics is inevitable. But I lack your forbearance. — Banno
You are quite correct "Metaphysics is inevitable." — Corvus
I heard that someone once said to Kant after he had introduced himself "Oh, I'm an automatic cunt". — Janus
Science is impossible without Metaphysics. Causality, gravity, relativity, atoms, ... they are all metaphysical concepts. — Corvus
Yes... but I guess it still leaves us with open questions about which metaphysical models we may be willing to engage with, or accept as worth our time. — Tom Storm
I'd say those are physical, not metaphysical, concepts. They are concepts which describe/ explain what is observed. Causality, gravity and relativity are not directly observable, but atoms are observable via electron beams just as microbes are observable via microscopes. — Janus
I would have thought that, where a metaphysics leads you to count two cups where there is otherwise but one, that alone would be grounds for doubt.
I really do not much care which account of Kant is the correct one - one world or two. Rather, my point is that, that this is such a bone of contention counts against the utility of the whole Kantian enterprise.I think it is unfair to Kant to claim that we would think there are two cups — Janus
Very droll. I approve.There are actually n cups my friend, where n = the number of people experiencing, and thus representing the cup. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I really do not much care which account of Kant is the correct one - one world or two. Rather, my point is that, that this is such a bone of contention counts against the utility of the whole Kantian enterprise. — Banno
There are actually n cups my friend, where n = the number of people experiencing, and thus representing the cup. — Count Timothy von Icarus
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