On the other hand, it makes excellent sense in the limited Saussurian context. A — igjugarjuk
But I am very open to the idea that Derrida whipped up a boogeyman or sniffed out a conspiracy. That he projected his private concerns on the tradition. — igjugarjuk
Phonocentrism privileges speech over writing. Speech is (or was said to be) the proper example of a sign system — igjugarjuk
Derrida, in his concern with 'the proper,' is surprisingly adjacent to Brandom, however different their styles and influences. — igjugarjuk
I might add that usage doesn’t only become metaphorical. For Derrida there is no non-metaphorical usage. Also, one would not be able to separate ‘mind’ from ‘matter’ , form from content , the transcendental from the empirical, presence from absence except as poles of a singular event. — Joshs
Perhaps Jackson should have said that , despite the fact that Kant’s idealism was intended to avoid Humean skepticism , Kant’s split between our representations of the world and the thing in itself leads inevitably to its own form of skepticism. The veil that remains in place between subject and world is deconstructed by Derrida. — Joshs
It's quite in line with say, the Kantian emancipatory project which of course Derrida claims fidelity to. — Streetlight
I'm a stickler. Again, just one quote from Derrida about his supposed skepticism would be nice. — Streetlight
I don't need anyone to explain it to me because I know it very well. I just find it interesting that many who like to talk about deconstruction can't substantiate much of what they say. Very often it seems to me they simply make things up. Pretty cynical if you ask me. Skeptical, even. — Streetlight
Derrida would agree with you that there are better and worse readings of texts. — Joshs
Heh. Funnily enough, at least with where I'm at now with Derrida, I'd still agree that he's a skeptic here :D -- at least, because of my understanding of having knowledge. — Moliere
I think this is a different sort of reading than what I'm giving. Can you see the difference? Or is there a real reading to which you're referring, a reading of Hume that is the right reading of Hume? — Moliere
Perhaps for Hume there isn't really that necessity — Moliere
and through habit we assign said necessity, but it is nowhere to be found in experience, ala Hume's argument. — Moliere
Is it not a fact that you experience? A little simpler than The World of Facts or something phenomenological, just the world I experience, and "I experience the world" is a fact. — Moliere
I read it as "the world experienced" -- as in, the world I experience, in fact. — Moliere
factually experienced world — Joshs
How would you interpret the Husserl quotation? Is it just wrong? — Moliere
What made sense to me was Hume's arguments regarding causation -- on the conceptual side you have the necessary connection between events, and on the experiential side you have habituation and the belief that what we experience is necessary, but only because of human habit. So necessity, at least, must be conceptually distinguishable from the world we experience. — Moliere
it's not a Humean construct of the mind where one can separate the experienced world from the concepts. — Moliere
From this vantage , talking about the ‘nothing’ as a lack of identity is incoherent. — Joshs
Doesn’t Hegel post a totalization of differences in Absolute Subjectivity? — Joshs
that he prioritizes unity and identity — Joshs
Hegel didn't say that being and nothing unite in time to form the universe, — Gregory
Because I perceive the concept of ‘outside of spacetime,’ fallacious. — universeness
guess my vocabulary needs some update. What’s the difference between the two ? — Hello Human
Instead, they claim that conscious beings and their experiences are the basis on which existence itself lies. — Hello Human
I don’t think it is meaningful to try to objectify ‘outside’ of everything that exists. — universeness
Even the Penrose bounce does not suggest a previous Universe becomes nothing before a new ‘Big Bang.’ — universeness
Unfortunately, this is quite common. Again, I wonder why ... — Alkis Piskas