Mww         
         we can't get away from accepting that there are things-in-themselves causing our impressions of them — AmadeusD
In Kant, this is wrong.
we can't get away from accepting that there are things-in-themselves causing our impressions
— AmadeusD
This is correct. IFF one accepts that the thing that appears to our senses, is the thing of the thing-in-itself. — Mww
Kant tells us that there are real, material objects 'out there' of which we can know nothing things in themselves. But that these objects cause our intuitions... which are not, as far as we care capable of knowing, anything like hte thing-in-itself.. — AmadeusD
These seem cautious admissions that the only inference is that things-in-themselves cause us to receive empirical intuitions of them, — AmadeusD
Going to leave this here, though, as it directly contradicts what I've come to think is what Kant meant:
"The conception of a noumenon, that is, of a thing which must be cogitated not as an object of sense, but as a thing in itself (solely through the pure understanding) — AmadeusD
This seems to restrict noumena to merely things-in-themselves…. — AmadeusD
…..perceived by something other than sensuous intuition. — AmadeusD
Curious, and unhelpful — AmadeusD
Mww         
         I take issue with the "idiotic insistence" suggestion, as if the equation of the noumena and thing in itself is such an unsustainable suggestion — Hanover
Mww         
         Kant considers monads to be negative noumena available to introspection! — Manuel
RussellA         
         With Kant, I'm never sure if I'm just not following it or whether it's just not followable. — Hanover
the equation of the noumena and thing in itself — Hanover
Manuel         
         
Mww         
         That's in the Amphiboly if I don't misremember — Manuel
AmadeusD         
         This seems a contradiction from the above. We now know two things about the thing in itself: (1) it is unknowable and (2) it causes intuitions. #1 appears definitionally true, but #2 an empirical statement. If X (the thing in itself) causes me to see a flower, I can say something pretty substantive of X, specifically that it elicits a particular intuition, but I don't think I can say that because it's noumenal. I can only say there are Xs out there and intuituions in here, but I can't say any particular X is consistently responsible for any particular intuition. — Hanover
AmadeusD         
         But those representations in us must have a cause. That which makes an impression on the senses, an appearance, from which follows a sensation, is sufficient cause. But, as already proved, it cannot be the thing-in-itself that causes the impression on the senses, which leaves only the thing of the thing-in-itself. — Mww
whereas noumena are nothing but conceptions, having no phenomenal representations at all, hence cannot even be known to exist. — Mww
So if phenomena are the representations given from human sensibility, noumena cannot be either the representations, or the means for the possibility of them. — Mww
they are very unhelpful. — Mww
Mww         
         Obvious our impressions are not of the thing — AmadeusD
From this, I can only be left with things that have no effect on sense, and impressions that come from nowhere/nothing. — AmadeusD
i really hope its not tedious and you turn into 180 Proof on me — AmadeusD
AmadeusD         
         All we know is that it is something with sufficient affect on our senses, a mere appearance. — Mww
Wayfarer         
         1. Thing-in-itself appears to us as an unknowable entity; — AmadeusD
RussellA         
         Kant posited that human cognition is limited to what appears to us through our sensory perception and understanding. — Wayfarer
"No matter how innocent idealism may be held to be as regards the essential ends of metaphysics (though in fact it is not so innocent), it always remains a scandal of philosophy and universal human reason that the existence of things outside us (from which we after all get the whole matter for our cognitions, even for our inner sense) should have to be assumed merely on faith, and that if it occurs to anyone to doubt it, we should be unable to answer him with a satisfactory proof.
"The mere, but empirically determined, consciousness of my own existence proves the existence of objects in space outside me."
RussellA         
         The "thing in itself" exists beyond the realm of human knowledge and experience. — Wayfarer
I don’t deny that Kant believed there were objects outside us. Only that we don’t know what they really are. — Wayfarer
Mww         
         
RussellA         
         I recall this part of CPR. It was about Refutation of Idealism. What was Kan't intention for the proof? Did he succeed in the Refutation? — Corvus
Corvus         
         Surely we perceive the world via our senses doesn't necessarily mean that the world doesn't exist?As our only access to a possible outside us is through our senses, how can we prove that there is a world on the other side of these senses when we only know of this possible world through our senses? — RussellA
What is the reasons for George Dicker to claim that Kant's Refutation of Idealism has failed? Does it mean that Idealism prevails in CPR?Not everyone believes that Kant succeeded. For example, George Dicker in his article Kant's Refutation of Idealism wrote: "I analyse Kant's Refutation of Idealism as he presents it in the Critique of Pure Reason and show that it is a failure". — RussellA
RussellA         
         Surely we perceive the world via our senses doesn't necessarily mean that the world doesn't exist? — Corvus
What is the reasons for George Dicker to claim that Kant's Refutation of Idealism has failed? Does it mean that Idealism prevails in CPR? — Corvus
Corvus         
         Possible worlds, and worlds in your imagination and memories exist in your mind, but they don't cause your perception for the external world.However, how do you know that these sensations are caused by a world that exists outside your mind rather than by a world that exists inside your mind? — RussellA
Kant's first premise in the refutation is that he is conscious in time. Some might ask to prove how does he know he is conscious in time? What if he was dreaming, or hallucinating?George Dicker argues that the main difficulty with Kant's argument in B276 is the part "All time-determination presupposes something persistent in perception". — RussellA
How can you step outside of your concept or intuition?The problem is, how can we step outside of time in order to see ourselves existing in time — RussellA
AmadeusD         
         I don’t deny that Kant believed there were objects outside us. Only that we don’t know what they really are. — Wayfarer
1. The thing-in-itself is not that which appears. — Mww
Mww         
         The thing-in-itself is not that which appears.
— Mww
Well, it doesn't appear in intuition, but for the system to make any sense it must appear to our sense organs to impart an impression outside of our ability to perceive that process. — AmadeusD
AmadeusD         
         
RussellA         
         Possible worlds, and worlds in your imagination and memories exist in your mind, but they don't cause your perception for the external world. — Corvus
How can you step outside of your concept or intuition? — Corvus
Kant's first premise in the refutation is that he is conscious in time. Some might ask to prove how does he know he is conscious in time? What if he was dreaming, or hallucinating? — Corvus
Corvus         
         How do you know you have a world internal to your mind? Is it a real world? How do you know it is the real world or just a imagination?How do you know that the world you perceive in your senses has been caused by the world external to your mind rather than the world internal to your mind? — RussellA
Mww         
         Something must be presented to our sense organs to even perceive that something has happened — AmadeusD
1. Thing-in-itself appears to us as an unknowable entity; — AmadeusD
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