Oh. That’s fine. I hope I didn’t give any indication I thought otherwise. Correlation not causation and all that. — Mww
A world with no existence is metaphysically impossible because metaphysics deals with existence.However, what would something metaphysically impossible but logically possible be? — Lionino
If something was independent of experience, then it would be A priori. But if something was independent of intelligence, then would it be also A priori? Well, then we wouldn't know what it would be. I wasn't sure on that. And your claim, that we don't prove, but reason on it sounded not making sense, because we don't know whether it were A priori or Thing-in-Itself, or some unknown empirical object.How do you prove something is possible independent of whatever intellect received it?
— Corvus
….makes no sense to me, and my…. — Mww
I wasn't meaning to deny existence because we are not receptive of a thing, but rather was saying that having a concept of something doesn't warrant its existence of it.…..seems to have made no sense to you. I meant by the proposition that just because we are not receptive of a thing is not sufficient warrant for us to den its existence. Whereas, if we were to deny the existence of that which is a cause of our sensations, we contradict ourselves. — Mww
Not quite sure what this means. Could you please elaborate?The difference between he intellect receiving from without, and creating from within. — Mww
It sounds absurd that you can reason on something which is independent of whatever your intellect received.How do you prove something is possible independent of whatever intellect received it?
— Corvus
You don’t. You reason to a justifiable conclusion on sufficient grounds. — Mww
No.Is nirvana or moksha even a worthwhile goal ? — Sirius
Are irrelevant until (such time of) the manifestation. The proposition was emphasising the time factor.A possible existence and its possible phenomenon may be irrelevant at a certain time, but time isn’t something to be ignored in general. Contingency in empirical knowledge mandates successions in time, so….. — Mww
Of course not, but it was to make the point that the alternative is not always the case.But that isn’t the system as a whole. It is human nature so want to know, and for that the whole system…..whatever it may be…..is a prerequisite. — Mww
How do you prove something is possible independent of whatever intellect received it?Nature is the totality of all that is possible independent of whatever intellect receives it. — Mww
Possible existence and phenomenon are not the actuality until they manifested, so should they not be irrelevant?Concepts alone, their origin and method of use being granted, in the domain of pure thought they do not, but consideration still must be given to possible existence and phenomenon. — Mww
Here we are talking about Existence as the actual instantiation of objects rather than the category.Existence, the category, does not grant existence to objects, but only makes necessary that an object exist for it to be an experience. — Mww
Yeah you could apply the concepts to the phenomena to get the understanding, but that is not the necessary connection is it? You can have a brand new phenomena with no concepts and no understanding presumed, attached or presupposed as just a sensibility. What is "Nature" here? What does it include?Within the system as a whole, from appearance in the beginning to knowledge at the end, it is impossible concepts have nothing to do phenomena, but Nature is still presupposed as having to do with existence — Mww
Doesn't it indicate that concepts has nothing to do with existence or phenomenon of objects?The concept comes first as a thought, the phenomenon corresponding to it is impossible, therefore does not come at all. — Mww
Nevertheless….remember the time relation? Which came first? In the case of, e.g., black holes, the concept, grounded in math and pure logic, antecedes the phenomenon. — Mww
What? That's not at all a reasonable comment on evolution to my mind. I hope i've missed something. — AmadeusD
I suggest that his premise can be justified by the Principle of Innatism, a natural consequence of 3.5 billion years of evolution.
Is there a better justification for his premise? — RussellA
Sure.Surely good philosophy needs to justify its premises. — RussellA
If you had strong enough evidences supporting your claims, then you might get somewhere.If I said that aliens from Mars are running all governments, and made no attempt to justify my statement, I would get nowhere. — RussellA
I am not sure if your justification using innate-ism were coherent for your premises or conclusions.Similarly, if I based a philosophy on the premise of a priori pure intuitions and a priori pure concepts of the understanding without attempting to justify my premise, my philosophy has been based on a weak foundation and will thereby be unpersuasive to many. — RussellA
Wrong...you know they are said to exist. And since there is no controversy regarding their existence among the experts, you have good grounds to believe they exist, You, curiously, have it all arse-about. — Janus
If you were wise enough to use proper language instead of the derogatory word in you post, you would have not lowered your level in public as you have done.If you addressed the points I presented instead of making pointless claims about "my level" you might actually begin to do some philosophy. I don't believe in a flat earth by the way; do you? If not, on what basis do you not believe it? — Janus
You seem to be confusing between knowledge and truth, and justified belief.By the way, it's not a matter of "worshipping experts" but of provisionally accepting that in their area of expertise their experience is more comprehensive and their judgements better informed than yours are. You go further than I do anyway in trusting their judgement, since you say you know Andromeda exists. And to say you know something, but do not believe it is incoherent. — Janus
If everyone was at your level, then they would still believe in flat earth. Experts worshipping syndrome does not prove anything.Wrong...you know they are said to exist. And since there is no controversy regarding their existence among the experts, you have good grounds to believe they exist, You, curiously, have it all arse-about. — Janus
Sure, but it is totally different thing asking about them to find out what Kant had meant by them, and asking about them to conclude their origin is innatism. The origin of A priori ideas in biological psychological sense would be in the interest of the evolutionary science rather than Philosophy.Possibly, but his philosophy isn't complete without asking where these a priori pure intuitions and a priori Categories came from. — RussellA
Universally to mean "under all conditions", not in the physical universe.When you refer to "universe" do you mean a universe within the mind or a universe external to the mind? — RussellA
To talk about the unknowns, it would only make sense in the possible world of unknown, as I have made clear in the other thread "Reason to believe in the existence of the world".From the Principle of Sufficient Reason, an appearance must have a cause, which may well be unknown. This unknown cause can be called "x", or even "Thing-in-Itself". — RussellA
To believe in atoms, I must see it with my own eyes, and even be able to touch them. I was never been able to do so in my whole life, hence I cannot believe in its existence.How can you know atoms exist, yet not believe in their existence? — RussellA
Kant was saying that pure intuitions and concepts are the the properties of our minds which work with pure reason in CPR. He is not interested in where they came from as if, they have walked into a pub, or inherited down into your mind by your ancestors. No no. :)If not from Innatism, where do you think our pure intuitions and pure concepts came from? — RussellA
That sounds like extreme idealism. We are talking about the universally and necessarily true knowledge, and it exists. Again it is nothing to do with the physical universe. Knowledge exists in our understanding. Universally doesn't mean the physical universe. It means "under all conditions".but this universe only exists in the mind of the perceiver, not in any world that exists outside the mind of the perceiver. — RussellA
You just committed a self-contradiction here. You shouldn't even be able to write about it, if above were true.They cannot refer to the world of Things-in-Themselves, as these are unknowable, — RussellA
I have demonstrated how even the most [t]rusted and accepted official definitions could be false, but you have gone back to the false official definition ignoring the real life demonstration and evidence.Knowledge is justified true belief, so knowledge has a stronger ground than belief.
If from the grapevine one hears the belief that atoms exist, and the grapevine justifies the claim, and in fact atoms do exist, then, and only then, is this knowledge. — RussellA
When you say "Innatism", it denotes psychological or biological nature rather than epistemic, conceptual nature, and it has nothing to do what Kant was meaning for A priori. A priori knowledge is for universally and necessarily true knowledge, and there is no room for difference in the truth value.The point of the a priori is that it distinguishes two very different approaches to the relationship between the mind and the world.
It distinguishes between Innatism, the philosophical belief that one is born with certain ideas and knowledge, and Locke's idea that the mind at birth is a blank sheet, a tabula rasa, devoid of all ideas or knowledge, where all our ideas and knowledge arrive from experience. — RussellA
Justified true belief has stronger ground than a knowledge via heard through the grapevine. I really don't believe the electrons, atoms and Andromeda galaxies exist, because I have never seen them, or been there. Without me personally justifying and verifying the facts, there is no ground for me in believing in them.I know the Andromeda Galaxy exists, but I don't believe it exists.
— Corvus
I think that this should be the other way round: "I believe the Andromeda Galaxy exists, but I don't know it exists"
The SEP article on The Analysis of Knowledge discusses knowledge as justified true belief. First one has a belief, and then one tries to justify this belief, and if one's belief is true, then one has knowledge
IE, belief comes before knowledge. — RussellA
Sure. Good point. :up:Justified yes (evidential), proven no (purely deductive). ← different — jorndoe
to denote in any possible way that you feel relevant i.e. logically, epistemically, intuitively, phenomenologically ....By "properly" do you mean deductively, with logical certainty? — jorndoe
The concept of the world is such a historic and rich topic in the history of philosophy, if we even look at the very beginning in ancient Greece, Thales was the first man ever asked what the world is made of, which started the philosophical tradition.Metaphysics that have survived (this far, sort of, in corners of academia at least), are just that. For some proposition, p, if attainable evidence is compatible with both p and ¬p, then we strand there. And we're venturing into metaphysics. Not particularly informative, like a difference that makes no difference (though Bateson used that phrase differently). — jorndoe
I was reading "On the Plurality of Worlds" by David Lewis over the weekend, and in the book Lewis was discussing Modality of possible worlds, and it was interesting. Indeed, the book made me think about the concept of the world in terms of various different types of possible worlds, and their nature of existence.Hence it can be extended with modal logic. Knowledge of the real world needs the real world to stand on, if you will. — jorndoe
Thank you. Hope you had a great time. Later~Have a good weekend. Grabbing a JD#7 on the rocks. — jorndoe
If you read all my posts, you would realise that I welcome genuine philosophical arguments, criticisms and refutations based on logic and reasonings, and I always try to present the same to the serious interlocutors.It may well be the case that you want to encounter only views that you like or are able to appreciate. You would not be alone there. — Tom Storm
Apologies if I mistook your true intention. The fact that you were communicating with @Janus in supportive manner towards him could have sent out the impression that you were just here to accompany and assist @Janus for his disrespect for the thread.Well it hasn't been a waste of my time so this statement is wrong. I find your views interesting. If you do nto wish to engage with a member just ignore them. Most members employ this strategy here. — Tom Storm
Indeed. Of all the great philosophers, he is the most clearly-spoken and incisive. — Wayfarer
Yes, but my question was how do you know it is real or illusion? How can you be sure?How does he know for certain what he is conscious of is not an illusion?
— Corvus
Isn't this the argument against Direct Realism, in that if Direct Realism was true, the external world would be exactly as we perceive it. However, in the case of illusions, there is an obvious difference between our perception and reality. For example, when a pencil is placed in a glass of water, it can look crooked. But it isn't really crooked. — RussellA
Definitely not.Kant was definitely not a Direct Realist. — RussellA
Not sure. I am not a DRist either. Maybe they perceive illusions as real too? Yes, real illusions? :)How does the Direct Realist know when looking at something in the world, such as a tree, that what they think they are looking at is just an illusion? — RussellA
How / Why do you justify your belief in something that you cannot prove it exists?
— Corvus
I cannot prove that electrons exist, yet I believe they exist. I justify my belief from the numerous scientific articles that I have read that say that electrons do exist.
Do you believe that the Andromeda Galaxy exists? Can you prove that it exists? — RussellA
Not sure what the IEP article was about, but it doesn't sound right. If A priori is just innate to you, and all different from person to person, then what is the point of A priori? Would it not better just as well call it as Relative concept rather than A priori? There must be some universality and necessity in truth on A priori, and that was what Kant was after in CPR.The IEP article on A Priori and A Posteriori writes: An a priori concept is one that can be acquired independently of experience, which may – but need not – involve its being innate, while the acquisition of an a posteriori concept requires experience.
A Priori does not mean universally true for all people at all times. A priori means in a sense innate within a particular person. My private subjective experience of colour when seeing a wavelength of 700nm is innate to me. — RussellA
I can't know what your perception of WL700nm would be like, and that was the point. Your claim on "A priori imposition of colour Red for the perceived WL700nm" doesn't sound valid, does it? If it were A priori imposition as claimed, then we must all have the same colour of Red in the visual perception. But we don't. Therefore, it cannot be A priori imposition.How can you know that when you are look at a wavelength of 700nm, your private subjective experience of colour is the same as mine? — RussellA
How does he know for certain what he is conscious of is not an illusion?In other words:
1) I am conscious of my existence in time
2) Therefore I am conscious of something persisting in time — RussellA
Does this mean, if something was conscious of itself, then it could be inside him? :chin:3) But this something that persists in time cannot be inside me, as this something cannot be conscious of itself — RussellA
No, because this imposition is a priori, and as priori is beyond choice. In the same way that when I see the wavelength of 700nm I have no choice as to what colour I perceive . — RussellA
Speaking as an Indirect Realist, none. I believe that things exist independently of the mind, and can come up with reasons to justify my belief, but cannot prove it. Such is the nature of Indirect Realism. — RussellA
No, because this imposition is a priori, and as priori is beyond choice. In the same way that when I see the wavelength of 700nm I have no choice as to what colour I perceive . — RussellA
Wasn't Kant refuting the rationalists rather than idealism? If it were idealists, who were they?An example of a Transcendental argument is used by Kant in his refutation of idealism. Idealists believe that things have no existence independently of the mind. — RussellA
What is the proof of the legitimacy of the concept that things exist independently of the mind?His Transcendental argument does not prove that things exist independently of the mind, only that the concept that things exist independently of the mind is legitimate. — RussellA
Any relevant quotes for this argument from CPR?Kant argues that:
1) since idealists acknowledge that we have an inner mental life, and
2) an inner life of self-awareness is bound up with the concepts of objects which are not inner, and which interact causally,
3) then we must have legitimate experience of outer objects which interact causally. — RussellA
(I'm not saying that you are doing this.) — Tom Storm
If anyone gets irritated with the topic nowadays, then he hasn't read a single book on philosophy or misunderstood the topic or question. That is how I would see it. — Corvus
Read some philosophy books, and learn instead of wasting time. :)Stop it...you're killing me! — Janus
Yes, some do. I don't see a point doing it.I agree. But I'm not sure people always consciously do this. But they tend to use arguments as surrogates for value systems. A classic example of this is presuppositional apologetics for Islam or Christianity. But this is a digression. — Tom Storm
The scepticism on the world was one of the historical philosophy themes. In the ancient times, they used to take it seriously, and some of them stopped judging on all things. But nowadays? We just use the topic to practice and study philosophy. If anyone gets irritated with the topic nowadays, then he hasn't read a single book on philosophy or misunderstood the topic or question. That is how I would see it. :)My primary question when faced with arguments about whether the world is real, or if am I in a simulation, or if matter an illusion and idealism is the correct ontology - is what is the significance? Is there anything in my life I would do differently? Almost always the answer is no. — Tom Storm
Well, I believe in calling a spade a spade, and it is not I who is looking for, or in need of, help. In any case, by all means carry on going around in your silly circle, it may be useless, but at least it will most likely provide a few laughs along the way, for others if not for you. — Janus
Not for me. Philosophy is about how you orientate your values, then come the arguments. My view is that people often settle on beliefs that appeal aesthetically, then a lot of post hoc rationalization comes into play. I also think the most interesting part is why people are drawn to certain arguments. Arguments dontl necessarily speak for themselves, they often speak to the biases of those who hold them. — Tom Storm
Philosophy is all about arguments. The conclusions are for each individuals.So is it more about the argument than a vital part of how you live? I am always interested in why people argue or hold positions. — Tom Storm
I am mainly interested in seeing different arguments on the topic, and forwarding my counter arguments if and where necessary. The conclusion is up to each individuals.I’m not making an argument, it is a question for you. — Tom Storm
Or if your definition of the world is, all that you perceive in your daily life, then you are seeing the whole world. But then a question arises, is your definition of the world objective?The underlined would suggest: Yes! But we must be humble about it to a very high degree! Not that this is news lol — AmadeusD
You need your argument for the statement. Without the argument, it would be just a passing suggestion. I cannot agree or disagree with your point without seeing your arguments for your claim.So what if there is no world? What then? — Tom Storm