all the stuff that's going on — fdrake
It seems to me you are addressing the problem solely through reasoning. — Carlo Roosen
Not a problem but I can't follow you. — Carlo Roosen
While I believe I do understand what Kant is saying, when I read it I say "yes, yes" every sentence. — Carlo Roosen
What I am referring to, and that is what I believe Kant is referring to as well, is that when we look at a duck and call it a "duck", we have never captured its reality. — Carlo Roosen
Ducks, in the sense of independently existing objects, aren't even "available" (scare quote) for us to call them "duck" though. in Kant though! What counts as a duck is a judgement of our perception. That's a very imprecise and inaccurate way of putting it, it's just supposed to connote that there's no "duck in itself" in Kant. — fdrake
Whereas our percept of a duck can be thought of as a representation of the duck-in-itself (the duck), we might even see how long its wings are. — fdrake
why not both? — Carlo Roosen
According to him the real thing we cannot understand — Carlo Roosen
I propose different terms, but they mean the same. — Carlo Roosen
The duck only exists in fundamental reality in the sense that it gives the confirmation when you know where to look. — Carlo Roosen
As for the business, I don't see the difference in what I say and what you say. With the cookies in a certain configuration, that "E" or "F" is a label we give to the form. Fundamental reality provides everything that is needed for these letters to appear, so in that sense they really do exist. But when we call it "E" or "F", we create something in our conceptual reality that is not there in fundamental reality. — Carlo Roosen
For me the important thing is to stay close to what you can perceive directly. Kant did not invent this theory out of thin air, he observed his mind while it was operating. — Carlo Roosen
There is the paradox within Kant's CPR that Kant doesn't properly answer, though gives an attempt in B276, of how we can know that there are things-in-themselves if we can never know what they are. — RussellA
I don't think that is true. Fundamental reality is a concept to point to the fact that the real nature of things cannot be understood conceptually. We have words for all kind of things that we do not know, I mentioned them earlier "surprize", "future", "unknown" or "black swan", (the latter referring not to a rare animal but a special concept for an unlikely event). So it is perfectly fine to talk about fundamental reality.Here you are conceptualizing "fundamental reality," but you're not allowed to do that. You can't even really think about it, — T Clark
He cannot speak of that which he speaks of ... yet he does. Explain. — I like sushi
It is quite possible to speak of things that you don't know. Language doesn't have a problem. The "unknown" you can speak of, just as "future", "surprise". — Carlo Roosen
Also there is a few things that we can say about fundamental reality, — Carlo Roosen
I fully agree with what is written there so I don't see the issue you have.Here's a link to an article you might be interested in - "Kant's Doctrine of the A Priori in the Light of Contemporary Biology" by Konrad Lorenz. — T Clark
I don't think that is true. Fundamental reality is a concept to point to the fact that the real nature of things cannot be understood conceptually. We have words for all kind of things that we do not know, I mentioned them earlier "surprize", "future", "unknown" or "black swan", (the latter referring not to a rare animal but a special concept for an unlikely event). So it is perfectly fine to talk about fundamental reality. — Carlo Roosen
Why not? — Carlo Roosen
Also "unknowable" is still a word. And "you cannot say anything about fundamental reality" is a contradiction in itself. — Carlo Roosen
There was something nebulous existing (yu wu hun ch’eng),
Born before heaven and earth.
Silent, empty,
Standing alone (tu), altering not (pu kaki),
Moving cyclically without becoming exhausted (pu tai),
Which may be called the mother of all under heaven.
I know not its name,
I give its alias (tzu), Tao.
If forced to picture it,
I say it is “great” (ta). — From Tao Te Ching - Verse 25
I don't see the issue you have. — Carlo Roosen
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