I already answered. It is ‘real’ to me. We experience what we experience. There is no ‘knowing’ for me in any absolute sense.
Now, how do you know what you perceive is ‘real’? If you answer your own question it might help, unless you find it meaningless? — I like sushi
PERCEPTION (of space is an illusion) becomes SPACE (is an illusion). — Mww
Aren't illusions to do with unfounded or mistaken sense perception?It wouldn't be an illusion if I saw an Ichthyocentaur, but to think that Ichthyocentaurs exist in the world would be an illusion. — RussellA
It is beyond belief that you seem to be in total oblivion that my question was against your claim. The question would have never been put to you, if you hadn't made your claim. Philosophy is all about claiming, asking and probing on the metaphysical issues . If you renounce that, then I don't see your point of doing philosophy.Frankly I find it to be a ridiculous question BUT given that you asked it I imagine if you answer it it may shed light on where you are going with this. — I like sushi
If you are able to recall, you claimed that you do actually say that the world you experience is real. in your post in this thread.Do you have a point or are you just going to throw out facile questions? — I like sushi
Can substance be further broken down into their constructive elements?Category mistake?
— Corvus
Not the case. Res cogitans and res extensa are two distinct things, yet they are both still substances. — Lionino
Only thing I have done was responding to your request.Tell me what you mean by ‘real’. — I like sushi
Again, cut to the chase please. — I like sushi
if I see a flying elephant that is not actually there (everyone else denies it is there) then the elephant does not exist but is real for me - unless I am being gaslighted.
— I like sushi
What do you know about the flying elephant in your mind? — Corvus
What do the Indirect Realist say about A priori concepts and space and time? Can these be mind-independent?I believe that Kant would say that he has both an indirect perception (causally indirect) and indirect cognition of the postbox as it really is in a mind-independent world, ie, the same as what an Indirect Realist would say. — RussellA
1. Real can mean physical existence. You are not just seeing something, but you can also touch grab feel use manipulate transfer and throw out physically.Tell me what you mean by ‘real’. — I like sushi
What do you know about the flying elephant in your mind?if I see a flying elephant that is not actually there (everyone else denies it is there) then the elephant does not exist but is real for me - unless I am being gaslighted. — I like sushi
Probing helps us understand how our mind works, why we have beliefs on certain things and not, and the nature of doubting etc.I feel like this is why you are probing? We know things because we can doubt them. — I like sushi
Find A491/B519.
It will tell you what you want to know, but not what you should be asking, at least with respect to Kantian metaphysics in general and CPR in particular. — Mww
Thank you for your post. It is always good to have more different opinions on the topic, which makes discussions more diverse and interesting.(well aware you did not ask me.. Just adding a perspective as I'm reading CPR right now for the first time so feel like i need this type of thing to nut out whether i understand.. any.. of it LOL) — AmadeusD
Yes, I think this is quite interesting point and also where there are different interpretations between the traditional and contemporary commentators on Kant.Issue is, it seems to me Kant denies the 'actual' existence of the object aside from the inner sense of it, so... I need to read more lol. — AmadeusD
Another case of linguistic aberration?The problem is then knowing what "direct" refers to. Does it mean causally direct or cognitively direct? — RussellA
What is Kant's own definition of Transcendental Idealism? I was under impression that he hadn't given out clear definitions on TI as such. According to your answer, it sounds like it is highly challenging or even impossible to come up with a clearcut definition of TI. But there got to be one, if you claim that yours is Kant's definition.What are your definitions…..
— Corvus
Mine are his. But having the definition still requires understanding the myriad instances of the term in accordance with it. THAT’S the hard part. — Mww
OK, let's see it this way. Are sure all your sense organs are perfectly accurate?How do you want me too?
What kind of argument do you want me to present?
Note: I find no need to ‘prove’ it to myself. — I like sushi
Yeah, whenever I read "Indirect X", I always get curious, "Indirect" from what, how and why?Possibly. The Wikipedia article on Direct and Indirect Realism does give alternate names:
In the philosophy of perception and philosophy of mind, direct or naïve realism, as opposed to indirect or representational realism, are differing models that describe the nature of conscious experiences.
The problem is, is it possible to describe a theory about which millions of words have been written using just two words. — RussellA
Perhaps you could be right.I think of "Indirect Realism" as a name rather than a description, as the Taj Mahal is the name of and not a description of a building. Similarly I think of "Transcendental Idealism" as a name rather than a description. — RussellA
It must be all the recent Kant commentators who pigeonholed Kant to be an idealist, realist, or phenomenologist etc etc, and we are just to trying to find on what basis was Kant so and so-ist? Maybe Kant had all those characteristic tendencies in his writings? It is just part and parcel of trying to understand Kant better suppose. Of course Kant was a Kantian.What would be the ground of making him anything but what he made himself? — Mww
Could Transcendental have implied "Anti"? I am not quite sure what the true definition of "Transcendental" in Kant exactly means either. I am suspicious if it meant simply "prior to experience".So a guy knows what TI stands for, then reads herein TI has nothing to do with idealism. What’s he to think, when he understands perfectly well that the I in TI intentionally represents idealism? — Mww
But comparing stones (or other such objects) with minds (res cogitans) seems to me a egregious equivocation of the idea of substance.
— Wayfarer
How so? — Lionino
How do you prove the world that you perceive is real?Could one perhaps say that the world as they experience it is real to them?
— RussellA
We do actually say that for everyone. — I like sushi
Only thing about "Indirect Realism" is that, "Indirect" sounds a bit vague. Would it not be better called something like "Representational Realism"? Because appearance and sense-data represent the contents in the mind.I would argue that Kant is in today's terms definitely an "Indirect Realist". — RussellA
I never believed that squirrels can live in houses. I have seen a few of them in the garden sometimes. They are very fast, and agile. They quickly do their business and disappear into the woods.but to answer your question: squirrel live roughly 10-30% (2-6 years) of their natural life span in the wild. With the hawk, foxes, and cars around here not good odds for a house squirrel. — Vaskane
There seem different schools of Phenomenology. For example, Heidegger's Phenomenology is much different from Husserl's. Merlou-Ponty has again different Phenomenology in its methodology and subjects too. Hence framing Kant as a Phenomenologist needs close investigation i.e. first defining what Phenomenology is, then under what ground Kant is Phenomenologist or not.Husserl seems central to Phenomenology. From SEP Phenomenology:
Still, the discipline of phenomenology, its roots tracing back through the centuries, came to full flower in Husserl. — RussellA
I think this is a fair comment. Appearance and sense-data is very similar if not the same. Kant keeps saying Appearance and objects are the same in CPR. Would it be the ground for making Kant an Indirect Realist? Kant definitely says that TI is nothing to do with idealism in the Prolegomena.Speaking as an Indirect Realist, I would say that Appearance and Sense-data are synonyms, where both are figures of speech, and are two different ways of looking at the same thing. — RussellA
Not necessarily. One may only lose one's identity. Of course, this doesn't mean that one's objective identity is lost too. One only loses one's subjective identity with the loss of one's memory. The objective identity is intact as a fact whether one can recall who one is or not.So, to you, if someone loses their memory, they simply die and become another person? — Lionino
As Kant said, any claims made on the Soul, also the opposite is true.Are you actually saying that or this is some figurate speech I am not picking up on? — Lionino
Suppose someone sees a red postbox. — RussellA
If they were a Phenomenalist, the Appearance is the real world. — RussellA
1. Do the Phenomenalists claim to know the real world perceived as the appearance? Or is it unknown existence?If they were an Indirect Realist, they would say that although the postbox appears red, the postbox as a Thing-in-Itself is not necessarily red. For the Indirect Realist, although the Appearance is real, the real world is the unknown Thing-in-Itself that is the cause of the Appearance. — RussellA
Should you not say that you were disturbed by the alarm clock, which woke you up involuntarily from your sleep, rather than you perceived the alarm bell ringing from the clock?I’m not sure how that proves you’re not perceiving the world. If you weren’t perceiving the world you wouldn’t hear the alarm clock. — NOS4A2
When you are sleeping, I would say you were not perceiving the world, because you would have been unconscious during the sleep. Your brain would have shutdown from your normal perception taking rest. Maybe you might be having dreams in sleep, but no perception on the world for sure. If you were perceiving something in the world in your sleep, then it is likely you weren't in deep sleep, or you weren't asleep at all.Even so, if you’re not perceiving the world, what are you perceiving? Are you perceiving nothing? Are you not perceiving? Or are perceiving something other than the world? — NOS4A2
If you accept that your perception is caused by the external object, but for some reason, the object you were perceiving is invisible from your sight, then you have no perception because you don't have the object causing your perception anymore. In that case, it would be rational to have no belief in the existence of the object or the world.Given this, is it reasonable to doubt the existence of the cup when you were not looking at it? — NOS4A2
you cannot say “the window was broken by a thing-in-itself”.
— Mww — RussellA
As Kant was not a phenomenologist, and believed in both Appearance and Things-in-Themselves, where the Things-in-Themselves are the cause of the Appearance, the Category of Causality cannot apply just to the Appearance but must also apply to the cause of that Appearance, ie the Things-in-Themselves. — RussellA
So specifically, I am searching for arguments, preferrably complete, even more preferrably in syllogistic form, for the belief that the self persists. Otherwise, I will remain in doubt, and in absence of any evidence of permanence, I will default to the position that it does not stay at all, and that we are constantly as always dying, as the comic posted in the first page depicts. — Lionino
Yes, good point. Here is the summary from ChatGPT on the problems of OLP.Yes, figures of speech can be confusing, but as figures of speech are an inherent part of language, figures of speech and the confusion they bring is unavoidable. — RussellA
Why did Nietzsche renounce Kant?
— Corvus
Because Kant was too subtle? — Wayfarer
Would you not agree that figures of speech can be confusing, and is illogical?However, perception, world, internal, external and sense-data should all be thought of as figures of speech rather than literally existing, and as figures of speech only exist in the mind as concepts. — RussellA
If you were perceiving the world while you were asleep, then you wouldn't need the alarm clock to be awakened by it. The fact that you set the alarm clock to be awakened by it proves that you don't perceive the world while asleep.If we weren’t perceiving in our sleep we wouldn’t wake up when our alarm went off. Our senses have evolved to wake us even in the deepest sleep. At any rate, I see no coherent reason why any of it should be doubted. — NOS4A2
While I look away, I wouldn't know if the cup exist, and I wouldn't know what the person would be doing either. The person could have looked away too, fell asleep, or walked out the room. Anyway, how can I believe in the existence of the cup when I am not seeing it, and base my belief in the existence of the invisible cup relying on the other person's perception, which is totally inaccessible to me?Think of the cup in your OP, the one you cannot be sure exists when you are not perceiving it. If you and someone else were sitting around the cup, and you look away, but the other person sees the cup has not moved or vanished or blinked out of existence, are you right to doubt the existence of the cup? — NOS4A2
But could you not say that your perception is caused by your sense-data? i.e. the sense perception of the external world?As there is no information within an effect as to its cause, it is therefore logically impossible to know the cause of an effect just from the effect itself. — RussellA
But do you keep perceiving the world while you are asleep? Are what you perceive always what you think you perceive? Was there any room for doubts, illusions or mistakes in the contents of your perception?I mentioned a few reasons why we’d keep believing in the existence of the world. For one, we never stop perceiving it. But also, there is no reason to do otherwise. — NOS4A2
For the above reasons.It’s why I ask the question. If you never stop perceiving the world, what are the grounds for doubting the existence of the world? — NOS4A2
Existence of God and proof is another interesting topic which is related to the topic of this thread.Don't mistake that for not doing "Gods" work. I too am an Atheist, and understand that Nietzsche, in a sense, is much like Nebuchadnezzar, although not a believer still carried out a similar mission to give people a purpose. — Vaskane
Did Nietzsche thought God had been alive and existing before? But died suddenly or gradually?Nietzsche found that "God is dead," to be highly problematic in the rise of nihilism. — Vaskane
Yeah, you said so yesterday, I think it was.
Probably my fault for branching off, in that I think your “I feel that you don't even think of 5+7 until your eyes see the numbers on the screen or paper”, doesn’t hold true.
Or I just misunderstood. Dunno. — Mww
Understandable. Nietzsche was an atheist.Because Kant allowed the illusion of God to continue for another 100 years or so. He was essentially just a Christian with his metaphysics. — Vaskane