Thank you guys
:) Just to preface, for you all, absolutely everything you've said is 'fair enough' and I don't mean to sound incredulous, if I do, below.
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
And this seems, clearly to me, but perhaps not others,
because we have no direct access to confirm or deny any findings. We are
necessarily precluded from 100% certainty for this reason. Inference can never be 100%.
Maybe I'm picking up something irrelevant to your formulations? could be, and if that's true, we may not even be disagreeing. But, I mean, I agree, carving off theologica, with your assessment. That's not really relevant. It could be that even the theologica didn't exist, and this theory could be un-ensurable.
I don't think you have grasped it — Janus
I understand (it's clear) you think this, but it is inaccurate. It doesn't change my position whatsoever. That said, I disagree with Kant, using his own account. Its not possible, from CPR, to conclude there is "one world" where somehow our intuitions (which are not the objects they represent) actually
are those objects. This is probably something beyond this discussion..So, idk. Maybe I'll leave that one here because it doesn't seem we'll come to terms.
then in that connection we have access to them — Janus
Disagree and have outlined in detail why not, in previous replies. Will leave this one.
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
According to your responses, it's extremely difficult
:smirk: I am genuinely joking - I don't know what to do with this passage given my position. I don't think its well-placed.
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but since we don't know the limits of nature, we shouldn't invoke the miraculous — Manuel
I certainly agree with this, so perhaps I just misunderstood.
But if you are a panpsychist in general — Manuel
I think I'm leaning this way, but i'm not all that well versed in metaphysics thus far. Panpsychism, on its face, seems to solve a few problems i see. Not tied to it.
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You’ve said it yourself: you think an external object just is a thing as it is in itself. — Jamal
My position is that that is the a
fact. A version of 'external object' which resides in the head(i.e experience) is quite plainly nonsensical. I think claiming this isn't Kant's position, even with Kant possibly not owning it, is tantamount to being dishonest (more on why, below, after you quoted something which seems to ensure that this is the case). His writing is known to be confused in places, and this seems to be one. He does not give us room to make this chess move in the CPR.
He is saying that inner experience — Jamal
Which is literally all we have. I'm having a lot of trouble understanding what you're objecting to...
Then he goes on to present his own contrasting position — Jamal
The quote you presented is a perfect example where I am arguing against Kant, partially because he makes no sense, and partially because I think he's wrong.
The quote posits that, somehow, even though internal experience is all we have to judge (which Kant accepts) we have 'direct' access to external objects, not found in experience. Totally incoherent on his account itself.
Since we have direct access to external objects, their existence is not merely inferred — Jamal
We don't. I think you're making a misreading of Kant either way. The quoted
does not infer that we interact directly with external objectsin experience but
via our sense organs, prior to experience (hence synthetic a priori). Our experience is
necessarily internal. We do not even
have an external experience on his, or most people's account because it makes no sense at all if our experience is mediated by sense organs. Kant's rather extreme and important addition to this scheme is to show (and I take this to be true, essentially) that we can
infer without doubt that those objects exist through the synthetic a priori. But, he still concludes, even with this certainty, that we can't even conceptualise anything about them (aside from Noumena.. not available to humans, it seems).
I have never claimed anything like that — Jamal
If this were the case, we'd have nothing to discuss. We would agree. So i'm unsure how you can claim that... So if that is the case, I apologise, and must have missed something extremely important. Perhaps you could assist?
What’s the tide thing? — Jamal
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).
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We should not expect to have access to such a thing. — jkop
Fully agreed. I'm unsure why others seem to think my position is otherwise. It's a mere observation of this fact.
A better assumption is, I think, that the processes that occur in our perceptual faculties and brains constitute the accessing of things. — jkop
I think that's a ridiculous assumption (well, if your adding 'direct' to the formulation) for reasons previously stated. But, that may just be a disagreement of kind. If you're not positing 'direct access' by our mind to the thing perceived, I have no issue. If you are, I can't get on the train.
conscious awareness of *what I see* — jkop
*the sense-data your brain is decoding into a visual experience it provides for you, a posteriori. I don't see how this isn't the case, given what we know about how our senses and perception work.
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
It is, though, empirically. It is 'seen' by your mind only via sense-data mediated by sense organs, and possibly aberrations in the brain, into your experience. This explains visual delusion, for instance, well.
The tree presents itself in my visual field — jkop
Absolutely not. Your visual field is produced inside your mind. Nothing is presented to it except impressions/sense-data/perceptions. Objects in-the-world aren't available unless you're collapsing the non-physical experience into the physical world. I would again, not get on the train.
conscious awareness cannot be separated from what it is awareness of, e.g. a tree. — jkop
It can though. Visual delusion(without qualifier - could be drugs or whatever else causing the aberration), is again, a great exemplar. If different people can be seeing something empirically different in their experience, then our perception seems mediated in an unreliable way. This is to say that in most cases, a shadow seen by any person might accurately represent the thing it is a shadow
of. That much is fair enough. But it does not follow that this is
reliable or that it is
access to the thing. Plainly, when an aberration of the brain can result in an individual receiving and decoding ostensibly the exact same sense-data and experiencing something different, we're seeing something less-than-direct going on. If we lived in a world of shadows, and literally never encountered the objects, not a lot would change except the number of 'delusional' individuals.
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. unsure what it would look like, either. No one has taken that route, so hard to know how I would feel about it. I would not be an adequate fellow to follow it from this conversation..