I think it is nowadays pretty useless, and becoming increasingly so in a world so polemically divided which faces so many much more pressing issues. — Janus
And Kant's system gave the foundation for Husserl's Phenomenology, which is a very prevalent and influential system today. So, old metaphysics is not totally useless or bad. For me, it is great study and reading material — Corvus
I find phenomenology - the littIe I understand of it - intriguing. I simply don't have time or the disposition to make a proper study of it. — Tom Storm
I don't understand phenomenology to be metaphysics except in the sense that metaphysical speculation shows us what we are capable of imagining. — Janus
Similarly, I think science has no need of metaphysical realism or materialism, and also can safely bracket the question of the role of the subject in constructing phenomena; — Janus
So, I remain unconvinced and unconcerned about purported "blind spots" in science; I just find that critique to be inappropriate. — Janus
Sure. I understand this. What use do you make of it in life? Is it just of academic interest, or something more? — Tom Storm
I would say there is no "thing" called a concept floating about in a thing called a "mind." — Ciceronianus
Concepts and minds all exist in the same world as chairs — Ciceronianus
To my understanding Kant became a dualist because of the arguments by Hume that physical "laws" cant be known — Gregory
Also i'd like to say that if a positivist says he is not an idealist, why won't he just call himself a materialist then? — Gregory
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? — Banno
Kant specifically denies knowledge of the things-in-themselves: so how could he possibly claim that things do or do not exist outside of minds? — Bob Ross
Thank you for your reply, and explanation. I am not sure if thing-in-itself is an entity that you are forced to formulate yourself conceptually. When you say, it is something that you formulate conceptually, it gives the impression that you know what thing-in-itself is. That is what conceptually formatting implies
But I think Kant never said that. Thing-in-itself is something that you cannot conceptually formulate. If you can, then it wouldn't be thing-in-itself. Would you not agree?
This statement seems to say that you have sensibility, representations, intuition and cognition in order to perceive an external object.
And you suddenly have a sensibility of the cup, a representation of the cup, an intuition of the cup, and then a cognition of the cup,
Anticipated by whom? Not by Kant, I think, or whatever Kant-in-himself may have been.
For my part, I blame Descartes for this adventure in the preposterous, and much else for that matter. He started the ball rolling, and doomed otherwise fine minds to the remarkably silly task of determining whether they and all they regularly and continually interact with every moment really exist and are what they are shown to be while we interact with them. 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
I have long wondered what it actually means to be a Kantian….. — Tom Storm
Kant does in fact claim things do exist outside minds, and that necessarily so. In fact, there are two arguments in affirmation of it, concluding from either subjective a priori** or objective a posteriori*** major premises.
So, what……you think the warrant for those claims was unjustified, or, you think he had no warrant at all?
It's strange to think of the phenomena/noumena distiction in relation to one's own body parts. Is there a nose-in-itself vs the phenomena of it? — Gregory
….proves that there must be real things outside of me in space (…) but this doesn't prove that the sensations or intuitions themselves must be non-fabricated. — Bob Ross
What contentions do you have? — Bob Ross
We both have the concept of a "thing" in our minds. — RussellA
It seems that your position is that of Idealism. — RussellA
Though I can't help thinking that something so clearly absurd (in this telling of the story) would have been noticed long before Wittgenstein — J
It's strange to think of the phenomena/noumena distiction in relation to one's own body parts. Is there a nose-in-itself vs the phenomena of it? — Gregory
Good point! A Physical thing, like a chair, is real, specific & tangible, requiring little thought to perceive. But metaphysical models are ideal, general & abstract, so they require a greater investment of time & thought to conceive.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
It's strange to think of the phenomena/noumena distiction in relation to one's own body parts. Is there a nose-in-itself vs the phenomena of it? — Gregory
Neither you nor I have minds lurking within us, separate from the rest of us. We think as part of our interaction with the rest of the world. Language as well is a result of that interaction, as are the definitions arrived at in the use of language. — Ciceronianus
Historically, artists, philosophers & scientists were the ones who were willing to put-in the effort to look beneath the surface, and "see" the universal essence of chairness : — Gnomon
Is your goal here to see how well you understand transcendental idealism as generally presented or how well transcendental idealism holds up to scrutiny?
Why must something "produce" experience? Why can't experience just exist? It seems you are assuming causality here. But from whence cause and why invoke it here if you're "starting from nothing" ala the cogito?
This just seems to beg the question. I can see 1, but then we jump to "something must produce experience," and now to "it must produce that experience due to causes external to itself (inputs)."
ure, if you assume something like: "data input ----> processing ----> output." But why not assume something more basic, like light passing through a window. Something like: "Experience exists. Experience flows, changes." - seems to require fewer presuppositions.
Personally, I think the attempt to build up a foundation for knowledge from something like 1 is just the wrong way to go about things. Epistemology seems to inevitably be circular and fallibilist to me. But, if you're going to do it that way, then it seems like presuppositions need to be limited (else it is just assuming what you set out to prove).
Why must we have "absolute certainty" when it comes to "ontological purposes?" History seems to show that we're bound to be wrong either way. Building up one's system from a "firm foundation," doesn't seem to make it any less likely to crumble. That being the case, it seems like the methods of science are good enough to inform ontological questions (where relevant obviously).
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