So, Kant's analysis might very well be relevant to some "essential nature," of human experience, provided we narrowly defined what constitutes the actualization of such an essence. However, it can't be prior to sensory perception. If anything, developmental biology would suggest that such regularities only come to exist provided a narrow range of environmental inputs. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Phenomena for Kant are appearances - which I so far take to always be in one way or another empirical. And, hence, I so far take it that for Kant space and time - both being a priori representations that are then in no way empirical - are not phenomenal in and of themselves.
Which is not to then say that either pure or empirical intuitions are not representations for Kant.
If you find this interpretation mistaken, can you please back up your disagreement with references. — javra
However, his elucidation of these issues would seem to cast greater doubt on Kant's suppositions. — Count Timothy von Icarus
….“unconscious" processes, a concept unavailable to Kant? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Might it be valid to say that what is often labeled in Kant as "a priori" might be better described using modern concepts of "unconscious" processes — Count Timothy von Icarus
So, sure, to describe Kantian terms in modern understandings is just to have a newer theory. People been doing that since forever, right?
He had a conception of the “unconscious”, and for “unconscious processes” nothing could be said anyway, so….
For Hoffman, the core mistake would be the presupposition that experiences must necessarily be of objects "out there," which in turn leads to the concept of the noumenal and thus the significant problems understanding the world around us that follow from this being being posited axiomatically. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Plus, if you think there now exist better answers to Hume's challenges and you are unhappy with where Kant ends up (or different readings on Kant), going back to the drawing board for a new paradigm only makes sense. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Might it be valid to say that what is often labeled in Kant as "a priori" might be better described using modern concepts of "unconscious" processes, a concept unavailable to Kant? — Count Timothy von Icarus
We can, in a roundabout, absential way, observe these (“unconscious”) processes. — Count Timothy von Icarus
…I don't actually think the whole modern focus on "beginning at the beginning" is actually helpful…. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If such be that, then how isn't that idealism, pray tell?
I'm mainly antagonistic to the Cartesian take on "res extensa" being utterly severed from mind stuff due to the former having extension in space but not the latter. — javra
And do smells necessarily have extension in space? — Count Timothy von Icarus
the simple fact that we can tell where we are being touched just by feeling it hints that our mind has extensionality (it is not a substance without dimensions, 0D). It is not just that the mind has the idea of extension within it and that some interaction with our organs causes some idea of spatial localisation¹, but that experience itself can be located with coordinates x,y,z — we can isolate sight and smell and hearing to operations or projections of our 0D mind, but we can't do that with touch. Our mind would not just be a point of volume 0 in our "pineal gland", but extend everywhere where there is sense perception, from our scalp to the tip of our toes. — Lionino
Can one imagine a sound without any volume or pitch? Can we imagine a smell without odor? — Count Timothy von Icarus
I'm mainly antagonistic to the Cartesian take on "res extensa" being utterly severed from mind stuff due to the former having extension in space but not the latter. — javra
And do smells necessarily have extension in space? — Count Timothy von Icarus
The question raised here is an interesting one, and I also take trouble with the split of res extensa and res cogitans. — Lionino
Given that most other mammals have a keener sense of smell than we do, I by this then infer that smell is generally directional, and, hence, spatial, in most lifeforms that are equipped with this physiological sense. — javra
the simple fact that we can tell where we are being touched just by feeling it hints that our mind has extensionality (it is not a substance without dimensions, 0D). It is not just that the mind has the idea of extension within it and that some interaction with our organs causes some idea of spatial localisation¹, but that experience itself can be located with coordinates x,y,z — we can isolate sight and smell and hearing to operations or projections of our 0D mind, but we can't do that with touch. — Lionino
But I think that touch goes even beyond. When we hear something at our left or our right, we simply hear it, and that sound invokes the idea of left or right, the experience does feel like it is happening within your brain; but when it comes to touch, we can tell the actual experience is not in our brain but all over our body. Maybe that makes sense. — Lionino
It is only via touch that we as first-person points of view—i.e. as consciously aware beings—permeate throughout and are, as such, fully unified with our own bodies in an indisputable manner: such that we are here defined as that awareness which touches and anything we touch becomes other relative to us, thereby delimitating us as bodies — javra
this does get complicated by the touching of one’s own body, but the relation between subject of awareness being that which touches and its objects of awareness being that which is touched remains unchanged — javra
I’m not certain we could isolate sight, smell, sound, as occurring within a 0D mind as I interpret you describing — javra
While writing this post I was touching my body in order to stimulate — not in a weird way — thoughts about the topic. — Lionino
Let's say our mind is indeed immaterial, being immaterial, it does not extend in space, so we can metaphorically say it has 0 dimensions. As soon as we reflect upon the experience of touch, it seems that experience is spatially extended. Being experience an attribute of the substance we call mind, it would be reasonable to conclude the initial assumption is wrong, and that the mind does extend in space (even if it is still immaterial perhaps). — Lionino
I get that not everyone can easily imagine things, but some are quite apt at it. All these imaginings will require spatial distances of delimitation to that which is being imagined. And since imaginings are purely mental, this then points to mind necessarily being extensional when in any way engaging in, at the very least, willful imaginings. — javra
We before anything else proprioceptively experience our bodies as extended—mouth here, ears, nose, eyes, hands, belly, legs and feet etc, all in different places. — Janus
I can see very clear connections with the noumenon here, only that this concept encompasses primary qualities to. So, it is a difference of degrees, not of kind. — Manuel
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