Not saying you've done it deliberately but I think you have phrased that in a way that is misleading. The way I would put it is: "It is true that even if all life disappeared from the universe, but everything else were undisturbed, that there would still be gold in Boorara."
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So, yes I do think we can make truth-apt statements about unperceived events. The alternative, that truth depends on knowledge, seems absurd to me. — Janus
Banno will confirm whether or not this misrepresents his view, but in any case, it is my view. — Janus
This by way of separating what is true from what is known to be true. Again, that a proposition is true is a single-places predicate, "P is true"; but that we know it is true is a relation, "We know P is true". Same for what are commonly called "propositional attitudes"; a name that marks this relational aspect. — Banno
I do not trust your ability to understand and present either what I am saying or what ↪Michael is saying. — Banno
Given minor differences in translations, yes, he is, and no, they are not. Mode of perception is not perception, and neither space nor time is ever an appearance, but only that which is in space and time, is. — Mww
We have therefore wanted to say that all our intuition is nothing but the representation of appearance; that the things that we intuit are not in themselves what we intuit them to be, nor are their relations so constituted in themselves as they appear to us; and that if we remove our own subject or even only the subjective constitution of the senses in general, then all the constitution, all relations of objects in space and time, indeed space and time themselves would disappear, and as appearances they cannot exist in themselves, but only in us. — Mww
Please follow their argument to the fullest. It is easy to get lost with two paragraphs almost repeating themselves line by line.Space and time are its pure forms, sensation in general its matter. We can cognize only the former a priori, i.e., prior to all actual perception, and they are therefore called pure intuition; the latter, however, is that in our cognition that is responsible for it being called a posteriori cognition, i.e., empirical intuition. The former adheres to our sensibility absolutely necessarily, whatever sort of sensations we may have; the latter can be very different for different subjects. Even if we could bring this intuition of ours to the highest degree of distinctness we would not thereby come any closer to the constitution of objects in themselves. — Mww
Change requires things that change, usually in the form of movement, but nevertheless, something empirical, whereas time itself does not change. — Mww
That applies to TKP rather than KP. I don't agree that we only know things that are not contradictory - cartesian truths. So while any particular truth might not have been known, it does not follow that every given truth is unknown. We do know things. That is, the "p" in your logic is all truths when it should be a particular truth. — Banno
∀p(◊(p ∧ ¬◊Kp)) says "For all truths p, it is possible that p is true and it not be possible to know p"
I think that should be "For all truths p, it is possible that p is true and yet p is not known". That would be ∀p(◊(p ∧ ¬Kp)). — Banno
1. The realist believes that it is possible for the truth to be unknowable
2. The realist believes that it is possible for the truth to be unknown — Michael
Kant is not saying here that space and time vanish as soon as the subject vanishes. — L'éléphant
Because to Kant, even space and time are only appearances to us — L'éléphant
And if we remove our own subject, then all relations in space and time, indeed space and time themselves would disappear — L'éléphant
it is best to maintain the distinction between change of place and internal change, as a fundamental ontological principle. — Metaphysician Undercover
I quite agree. If you don't mind I will go overt the argument again, just to make sure we agree on the basics.There seems to be a lot of ambiguous phrasing in this discussion — Michael
It is true that there is gold in Boorara. If all life disappeared from the universe, but everything else is undisturbed, then it would still be true that there is gold in Boorara.
It is true that even if all life disappeared from the universe, but everything else were undisturbed, that there would still be gold in Boorara. — Leontiskos
it is not time or change that changes but things.
— Janus
Not really. Or, not always. I just ate dinner from the same plate I ate dinner from last week.
Anyway….not that important. — Mww
The mistake you are making is failing to notice the difference between "is true" and "would be true". It is true for us now that there would be gold etc., even if all percipients were wiped off the face of the Earth. That is not the same as to say it would be true that there is gold even if all percipients etc. — Janus
Actually it surprises me that being a theist you don't believe it would still be true because God would be there to know it. — Janus
That is a very thin attempt at an explanation. What are the two putatively different claims, how are they different, and which one am I supposed to be making? — Leontiskos
Banno makes that statement as an atheist who is presumably not assuming non-living minds (whether or not God counts as a non-living mind). — Leontiskos
I just reiterated what was in the text. How could you have missed that, too?Hopefully this indicates you now understand the point being made in the text, that space and time belong to the subject himself, so that when there isn’t a subject there aren’t those necessary pure intuitions that belong to him, precisely what Kant meant by the disappearance of the one entails the disappearance of the other. — Mww
I'll pause there. I gather we agree at least that this is the account being scrutinised? — Banno
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