I'm unsure why - this seems to define miracle as rare. As i understand, we could get a miracle per moment; as long as it's something which requires the suspension of established natural law, it would just be a lot of miracles. Though, this does go to the origin of those laws - and a force which overcame them. I don't think I either know enough, or care enough, to go further but 'being common' doesn't seem a defeater, to me. Might be misunderstanding! — AmadeusD
I do, though, presuppose that if mind-at-large is a thing (in mind of panpsychism, lets say) then there will be natural laws regulating its behaviour and so there's no miracle in it. If it is somehow totally inexplicable, then yeah, it would have to be an ingression to reality, rather than some discreet aspect of reality. — AmadeusD
The short answer is that Kant is an empirical realist, but the thing-in-itself is not an empirical thing. It's a conceptual construction, a thing imagined as having no properties, and as such a limit beyond which there is nothing more to know. We should not expect to have access to such a thing.I'm wanting something from Kant that indicates he thinks we have an access to things-in-themselves. — AmadeusD
I am not aware of any competing theories. And as I have already acknowledged scientific theories are never proven; it is always the case that they may be wrong. — Janus
I don't think you have grasped it — Janus
then in that connection we have access to them — Janus
we do not know, and do not have access to what and how they are in themselves. It's really not that hard to understand. — Janus
I certainly agree with this, so perhaps I just misunderstood.but since we don't know the limits of nature, we shouldn't invoke the miraculous — Manuel
But if you are a panpsychist in general — Manuel
You’ve said it yourself: you think an external object just is a thing as it is in itself. — Jamal
He is saying that inner experience — Jamal
Then he goes on to present his own contrasting position — Jamal
Since we have direct access to external objects, their existence is not merely inferred — Jamal
I have never claimed anything like that — Jamal
What’s the tide thing? — Jamal
We should not expect to have access to such a thing. — jkop
A better assumption is, I think, that the processes that occur in our perceptual faculties and brains constitute the accessing of things. — jkop
conscious awareness of *what I see* — jkop
My visual access to the tree is direct in the sense that the tree is not seen via something else that represents the tree. — jkop
The tree presents itself in my visual field — jkop
conscious awareness cannot be separated from what it is awareness of, e.g. a tree. — jkop
I would certainly be open to exploring whether that latter issue is actually additional and sans aberration there's some way to assert reliability in perception. I've yet to see that though. — AmadeusD
[the thing as it is in itself] is merely an aspect of an external object, the aspect that we logically cannot access — Jamal
The short answer is that Kant is an empirical realist, but the thing-in-itself is not an empirical thing. It's a conceptual construction, a thing imagined as having no properties, and as such a limit beyond which there is nothing more to know. We should not expect to have access to such a thing. — jkop
The example was in response to (i think Janus) positing that via the senses, the inference we make to external objects is essentially 'perfect' and provides 'direct access' to those objects in some way.
My response was to deny this categorically, and the examples used were:
A shadow does not give us any access to the object that caused it to appear, despite (possible) a 1:1 match in dimensions.
The second example was that if you're standing in a bay (A) and a tidal wave hits (lets assume you're Dr. Manhattan) this gives you no access whatsoever so the empty bay(B) across the ocean whcih caused it. While crude, I think these hold for Experience (A) and ding-an-sich (B). — AmadeusD
Corrections are intended to correct. I do not see that you've done this. Asking to be corrected is not asking to be either taken for a ride, or to accept any objection on its face. I've tried to explore the ideas you've put forward and tehy are left wanting to me. If you see this as you describe, far be it from me :)
Yes. They are. Unsure why you're somehow using that as the examplar of the argument, rather than a fairly direct and illustrative couple of analogies. Which you've said it is. So, at a bit of a loss mate :\ They illustrate well that aspect of what I've put forward that you are not getting. If you're not wanting to explore that, then so be it! No issue :) Perhaps I just don't understand - and if that's the case, I couldn't accept what you're putting forth anyway so please don't fault me for either 1. disagreeing with you; or 2. Not understanding you. I am trying to be honest, not difficult. — AmadeusD
But as an example, it seems patently incorrect when you reject the notion that Kant uses the 'two worlds' model. It is clear he does, and this is expressed by other philosophers constantly — AmadeusD
Hence the division of objects into phenomena and noumena, and of the world into a world of sense and a world of understanding, cannot be permitted at all in the positive signification, although concepts do indeed permit the distinction into sensible and intellectual ones. — A255
… only a boundary concept serving to limit the pretension of sensibility, and hence is only of negative use. But it is nonetheless not arbitrarily invented; rather, it coheres with the limitation of sensibility, yet without being able to posit anything posi tive outside sensibility's range.
Is someone claiming there's 'pain' out there not being experienced? — AmadeusD
Stream of consciousness is cool in modernist fiction but confusing in this context. :wink:
Anyway, it’s rhetorical bluster with a hint of bullshit, but it seems good-natured so you’re forgiven :grin: — Jamal
The key secondary text is Allison’s Kant’s Transcendental Idealism. — Jamal
Talk of a noumenal world looks plainly wrong to me, since noumena are objects of thought — Jamal
BTW I have personally found LLM AI tools to be sometimes bad with philosophy so I suggest you avoid them except perhaps for guiding your study—certainly don’t give them the last word. — Jamal
Likewise — jkop
The experience has a mind-to-world direction of fit. — jkop
I'm still wanting an explanation of how it's possible we're seeing "actual objects" that i can explore. Every explanation attempting to do so just ignores entirely that we literally do not see objects, but reflected/refracted light which in turn causes us to 'see' a visual construct. No one seems to disagree, but still reject the fact that we cannot ever access external objects. It's an odd thing to note. Seems to always boil down to 'we look at something, therefore...' with no treatment of the intermediary.. — AmadeusD
But, having recently come to the CPR I literally have never seen a respected philosopher claim what you're claiming. Perhaps 'patent' is a touch far, but as I see it, this is the standard for anyone not trying to be edgy. — AmadeusD
There is no analogy between 'pain' and 'actual objects'. — AmadeusD
Pain is the experience of certain biophysical causal chains. Not so with visual data, imo. — AmadeusD
Of course, the particular problem here is really just linguistic — Jamal
visual experiences are biological facts that arise under certain conditions of satisfaction — jkop
What we don't agree on is whether or not it is correct – or even sensible – to say that the colour red is a property of that external world object. Indirect realists say that it isn't, whereas direct realists (or at least naive colour realists) claim that it is. — Michael
For if one is unable to know anything about the external world, then one can not make any claims about it at all – even claiming that knowledge about it is impossible, because that too is knowing something about the external world – namely, that it is unknowable. — Thales
In fact, wouldn’t you need to bypass your own perceptions and go outside your own mind in order to make such a claim? After all, according to the argument, your own perceptions and mind are unable to determine anything about the external world. Given that argument, you would need to employ some means – other than your own perceptions and mind – to be able to verify whether or not an external world can be accessed by your internal perceptions and mind. — Thales
If we are to know anything, then don’t we need to (somehow) have access to that object of knowledge? And to have access, don’t we need a means by which we access it? When we go on a journey by automobile, we need a road to access our destination. So too with knowledge; we need a “road” (or a way) to get it. — Thales
Take another example: We solve algebraic problems by adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing. This is the means by which we access – or gain knowledge about – the answer. Note that we do not identify the process of adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing with the answer to the problems – they are merely the means by which we access the answer. Without adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing, we can not have knowledge about (answers to) the problems. — Thales
Skeptics misrepresent their critics as identifying perception with the world itself. Rather, aren’t skeptics the ones conflating process with result; confusing the road with the destination; and identifying addition, subtraction, multiplying and dividing with the solutions of algebraic problems? — Thales
And one final observation: It seems to me that the skeptic is rigging the game from the start – taking away the means by which we can have knowledge of the external world in order to prove it is impossible to know anything about it. Which actually reveals another logical issue – that of assuming what is to be proven and then “proving” it (the fallacy of begging the question): — Thales
Just because I assume and assert that all black cats bring bad luck, it doesn’t (really) follow that bad luck befalls anyone who gets a black cat… does it?! — Thales
Thank you for your thoughtful response to my post. Although I also appreciate the input given previously by the other responders, you actually went through (most of) my arguments and replied directly to them, rather than opening up whole new streams of thought – which, again, is great and I appreciate being the catalyst for such streams; but also I was genuinely curious about what people thought (specifically) about my arguments. So I’m grateful you took the time to address them, and I look forward to re-reading and cogitating more on what you have written!Beverley — Beverley
In my view, it is impossible to get around the skeptics’ doubt. Descartes thought he had, but he hadn’t. — Beverley
The analogy is between feeling (pain) and seeing (objects). — jkop
Is visual data not the result of certain biophysical causal chains? Or do you just mean that it's the result of other causal chains? What Is an example of positive empirical evidence for visual data? — jkop
What is the light reflected/refracted by? — wonderer1
Ah, so you’re one of those guys! — Jamal
Your questions imply that you consider the seeing of a thing to require that there be no light passing between the thing and the eye; that if there is a physical process involved in the perception of a thing, that thing is not being perceived. — Jamal
You say we see light — Jamal
I would have expected this to be your kind of position. — Jamal
why does your personal use of the word differ so much from everyone else’s? — Jamal
Of course, the particular problem here is really just linguistic — Jamal
New York I’m travelling to, directly. — Jamal
how incredulous you are — Jamal
but it does show that your incredulity is inappropriate. — Jamal
And didn't you see my quotation from Kant himself, arguing against two worlds? — Jamal
Kant is not any kind of idealist at all — Jamal
If there is any particular statement of mine about Kant's philosophy that strikes you as outrageous — Jamal
properties of the external world objects. — Michael
3. — Michael
Your questions imply that you consider the seeing of a thing to require that there be no light passing between the thing and the eye; that if there is a physical process involved in the perception of a thing, that thing is not being perceived. — Jamal
This is not my position and I have absolutely no clue how you could possibly glean this from anything I have said. — AmadeusD
I'm still wanting an explanation of how it's possible we're seeing "actual objects" that i can explore. Every explanation attempting to do so just ignores entirely that we literally do not see objects, but reflected/refracted light which in turn causes us to 'see' a visual construct. No one seems to disagree, but still reject the fact that we cannot ever access external objects. — AmadeusD
You say we see light — Jamal
I do not. — AmadeusD
Every explanation attempting to do so just ignores entirely that we literally do not see objects, but reflected/refracted light which in turn causes us to 'see' a visual construct. — AmadeusD
Here, you imply that we cannot see objects, for the reason that light intervenes between the objects and the visual system. If that is not what you meant, and there is some other argument here, I cannot see what it could be. — Jamal
for the reason that light intervenes between the objects and the visual system — Jamal
I'm still wanting an explanation of how it's possible we're seeing "actual objects" that i can explore. Every explanation attempting to do so just ignores entirely that we literally do not see objects, but reflected/refracted light which in turn causes us to 'see' a visual construct. No one seems to disagree, but still reject the fact that we cannot ever access external objects. — AmadeusD
f you don’t actually mean what you say, and you can’t remember what you said, and you’re unwilling to read over what you’ve said before to understand my objections, then it’s not surprising that I’m not getting through to you. — Jamal
I can’t tell if it’s just that your reading comprehension is bad or if you’re intellectually dishonest. — Jamal
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