True, — RussellA
We seem to be in agreement. :cool: :up:True, — RussellA
True, but the problem is the engineer would sometimes say, all metaphysical knowledge is invalid, because it deals with things that we cannot see or touch. At that moment, the engineer has forgotten that he has transformed himself into a metaphysician in undercover, and claiming metaphysical statements. Metaphysics is invalid form of knowledge is also a Metaphysical claim, which is contentious i.e. true or false depending on what we are talking about.A Metaphysician asks "what are numbers". An engineer asks "what does 130 plus 765 add up to". The engineer in designing a bridge doesn't need to know the metaphysical meaning of numbers. — RussellA
So your interpretation seems to say that there is a thing-in-itself as legitimate existence out there, but the human brain cannot know it due to the limitation of what the brain can know. Fair enough.It would hardly be surprising that as we are also animals, there are some things that are unknown and unknowable to us also because of the physical limitations of our brains. — RussellA
the engineer would sometimes say, all metaphysical knowledge is invalid, because it deals with things that we cannot see or touch — Corvus
human perception cannot catch every properties of perceptual objects in one single sense data — Corvus
On the next perception, the unperceived properties of the objects might be perceived, and the thing-in-itself gets clearer in its nature. — Corvus
Some thing-in-itself objects are not likely ever to be perceived at all, but we can still feel, intuit or reason about them such as God, human soul and the universe. — Corvus
What the Kantian concept fails to see is that noumena is all pervasive. This obviates the nonsense about ontological divisions: there are none
As a cat cannot transcend the physical limitations of its brain, neither can a human. — RussellA
Wasn't it what Bob Ross and his supporters were claiming in his previous thread "Metaphysics as illegitimate source of knowledge"? I was sure they were the engineers transformed into the metaphysicians undercover. hmmm your short memories :rofl:Harsh on engineers. The engineer wouldn't say that the physicists knowledge of string theory was invalid because we cannot see or touch one-dimensional objects called strings. — RussellA
From here, suppose it is up to personal opinion. Of course, if you are a dedicated esoteric magician, you could see thing-in-self God, human soul no problems, and the Kabbalistic Tree of Life would be your universe :DI don't agree. There is as much a chance of humans being able to feel, intuit or reason about some things-in-themselves as a cat will ever be able to feel, intuit or reason about Western Literature. — RussellA
Because without real things that impact us there is no accounting for sensations
The mind is represented conceptually, but no mere conception is an experience. To represent the mind for experience requires the intuition of it as phenomenon, which requires the mind to be a real object conditioned by space and time, which contradicts the conception
What you argue is pretty interesting, but I don't know to what extent you accept or deny the existence of things-in-themselves.
On the other hand, I see your premises and arguments as a subject of Philosophy of Language.
So it is "mechanically" possible that there are exactly such unregistered events as Corvus is postulating. — Pantagruel
Similarly, even if a super-intelligent alien showed us a page from "The True Nature of Reality", we could never make sense of it. — RussellA
But essentially, the amoeba eventually becomes a man. So maybe it does happen? — Pantagruel
But the “real objects” which excite your sensibility could be fabrication by a higher power, could they not? — Bob Ross
just because there is a set of intuitions which contains a separation (in space and time)….does not mean that the “object” which impacted you exists as something which excited your sensibility — Bob Ross
Sure. But why would we care? We work with what we’re given. In the case for natural real objects, say, what do we gain by asking if something we know absolutely nothing about created that of which we know very little? And for real objects humans make for themselves, it doesn’t even make sense to ask if a supersensible whatever created rakes and dump trucks.
That’s precisely what it means, insofar as intuitions are proven only and always sensuous. If denied, such that intuitions do not depend on the existence of real things that affect the senses, then you have falsified T.I., at least the original view of it, without sufficient reason.
I forget if I’ve asked already, but assuming I haven’t……how does a ding as sich have a name?
We could throw caution to the wind and call a "flat" three-dimensional image a two-dimensional image. :smile: — RussellA
If the things-in-themselves are completely unintelligible, then I honestly no reason to believe they exist in the first place (since I no longer think it is possible to prove that I have a representative faculty transcendentally and the empirical evidence for it presupposes various forms like logic and math, which I allegedly cannot assume of the things-in-themselves). — Bob Ross
Kant's introduced the concept of the “thing in itself” to refer to reality as it is independent of our experience of it and unstructured by our cognitive constitution. The concept was harshly criticized in his own time and has been lambasted by generations of critics since. A standard objection to the notion is that Kant has no business positing it given his insistence that we can only know what lies within the limits of possible experience. But a more sympathetic reading is to see the concept of the “thing in itself” as a sort of placeholder in Kant's system; it both marks the limits of what we can know and expresses a sense of mystery that cannot be dissolved, the sense of mystery that underlies our unanswerable questions. Through both of these functions it serves to keep us humble. — Emrys Westacott
this just demonstrates that there is no such transcendentally (valid) argument for there actually being real objects beyond our intuitions. — Bob Ross
What is the argument for intuitions necessarily being sensuous (in the sense of real objects exciting a sensibility)? I don't see how one could transcendentally prove that. — Bob Ross
Like how is it called a "ding an sich"? — Bob Ross
...to there... from where exactly? — creativesoul
Suppose I saw someone act in an unexpected way. For example, they had bought a winning lottery ticket and then proceeded to tear it up. As an outsider, how can I know their inner logical processes in order to say they are exhibiting either Determinism or Free will. — RussellA
However, what if in fact my act had been determined, and what I thought was Free Will was in fact only the illusion of Free Will. — RussellA
In any case, talk of screens and other flat surfaces aside, the original point of contention was the idea that our visual field is a two-dimensional image, and I see nothing whatever to support that assertion. — Janus
The point was that people act in ways contrary to their own logical process...The issue is whether people are bound (determined) to act according to what their own logical process dictates. — Metaphysician Undercover
I forget if I’ve asked already, but assuming I haven’t……how does a ding as sich have a name?...No. Like….how is it called a cup-in-itself. — Mww
How can we know that. I cannot look at someone and know their internal logical processes. Even I don't know my own internal logical processes. — RussellA
One can know it by self examination, introspection. It looks like you haven't tried it, or gave up to soon without the required discipline. — Metaphysician Undercover
I see a red postbox, which is a representation in my mind, — RussellA
As regards the cup-in-itself, "cup" names what we perceive in our minds, not something unknown that exists independently of our minds. — RussellA
The unknown cause of our perceptions is in Kant's terms a thing-in-itself — RussellA
If you see a red postbox, then it is the case the thing comes to you already named, which makes you a direct realist. — Mww
If you don’t know the true cause of your representation, how did it get the name red postbox immediately upon you seeing it? — Mww
I submit, that when you say you’re seeing a red postbox, it is because you already know what the thing is that you’re perceiving. But there is nothing whatsoever in the perceiving from which knowledge of the perception follows. — Mww
According to your system, you should be able to name the sound without ever actually perceiving the cause of it. — Mww
The thing you perceive may indeed end up being named a red postbox, and that for each subsequent perception as well, but the name cannot arise from the mere physiology of your vision — Mww
Direct realist: one who attributes properties as belonging to the object itself and which are given to him as such, and by which the object is determined;
Indirect realist: one who attributes properties according to himself, such that the relation between the perception and a series of representations determines the object. — Mww
I submit you don’t see a red postbox. — Mww
I asked about how the thing-in-itself gets a name — Mww
A cause doesn’t have to be known, it just has to be such, for an effect that is itself determinable. — Mww
Direct realist: one who attributes properties as belonging to the object itself and which are given to him as such, and by which the object is determined;
Indirect realist: one who attributes properties according to himself, such that the relation between the perception and a series of representations determines the object. — Mww
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