Where in his works does Kant clearly and convincingly explain precisely how the "nature" of a given empirical object of everyday a posteriori experience can be generated by human sensibility and understanding simply applying space, time, and the categories to what he calls the given manifold of sensation? Kant needs more than just a given manifold of sensation. — charles ferraro
I submit that Kant's epistemological theory is incomplete precisely because he neglected to address this important matter and how it would fit into his theory. — charles ferraro
That's about the opposite of what I stated. — Wayfarer
Don’t make me go back and copy the hundred thousand times you’ve claimed that we all learn abstract concepts through experience. — Wayfarer
There is huge controversy over their reality and whether number is invented or discovered and so on. Empiricist philosophers like yourself generally reject the notion that they have any reality apart from as the product of the mind (read 'brain'.) — Wayfarer
Consequently, there is no conceptual space for the idea that there are different levels or domains of reality - to us, things either exist or do not exist, they do not exist 'in different ways'. — Wayfarer
So the claim is just not true on it's face. People do take contradictory arguments seriously and many find them useful - presumably. — Isaac
Remember, these are models of the quantum realm, models that have a very high degree of predictive value, but models just the same. In Einstein's quote, he doesn't say that reality is contradictory but that we have contradictory pictures of reality. This makes a world of difference in what is affirmed by him. — javra
I can imagine arguing that contradictions get weeded out because they're inherently useless, being necessarily false, but I doubt even that's right. We often have good reason to believe both sides of a story, so we keep our options open, and for a while they live side by side. So what? — Srap Tasmaner
TMK, a particle is localized thing with volume, density, and mass. Whereas a wave function is not. So a wave function is not a particle. And hence the term "wave-particle duality". Am I missing out on something? — javra
This, I think, will depend on what significance one imports into the terms "particle" and "wave". If the LNC does hold, however, then one can not have a photon be both a particle (A) and not a particle (~A) at the same time and in the same respect.
For example, it might be that the unobserved photon is neither spatially localized (particle) nor disperse fluctuations (wave) but something else that can account for both observations.
That said, as to our imagination likely not being up to par, as I tried to previously express, I agree. — javra
People are frequently inconsistent, and philosophers know that better than most, not least because they accuse each other of it all the time. — Srap Tasmaner
I doubt the LNC is even useful as an ideal to strive for. If our mental faculties are primarily geared toward making useful predictions, and those predictions are probabilistic, I don't see what the LNC even brings to the table. — Srap Tasmaner
Do you often say two things simultaneously? — Srap Tasmaner
Our beliefs one moment are never consistent with the last, by design and a good thing too, else how would we learn about the world. — Srap Tasmaner
On the other hand, if it weren’t for this law, or universal principle, then there’d be no biggie to comprehending particle-wave duality in QM. But no one can intuit that X is both a particle and not a particle at the same time and in the same way. Hence the incomprehensibility of much of QM as its currently interpreted. — javra
I think you are likely correct to see it as a matter of recognition. I was discussing my ideas on that with Srap here. — wonderer1
Consider that if I assert A, and you convince me of ~A, then when I join you in proclaiming ~A, am I contradicting myself? — Srap Tasmaner
I'm not convinced civilization would collapse if people were inconsistent and contradicted themselves, because I think they are and they do, consistently. — Srap Tasmaner
So are you of the belief that those who have not experienced the recognition are therefore not making use of the principle of non-contradiction? — Leontiskos
The Republic begins with Thrasymachus saying that justice is merely the order of those who presently have power. There is a lot of evidence to support this view. The argument against this is an appeal to see life in a different way.
So, what is that set of evidence against what it would bring into question? — Paine
The principle of non-contradiction is more than a linguistic tool or even meta-tool. It is an indispensable presupposition which is in play whether you recognize it or not. — Leontiskos
Paine was right to point to the principle of non-contradiction in response to this claim. Are you of the opinion that the principle of non-contradiction might change over time? — Leontiskos
I am not sure either. Both Plato and Aristotle argued against the 'relativity' of Protagoras. From that point of view, the matter is something that needs to be hammered out rather than treated as an uncontestable condition.
But as an appeal to a condition, the argument is about evidence. — Paine
Biggest issue I suppose, is the fact he doesn’t show how the pure conceptions come about, other than to posit that they reside transcendentally….make of that as you will….. in understanding, to serve as rules for the reduction of the diversity of representations in intuition to that which ties them all together under a conception. — Mww
What is the difference between "conclusions are generally based on presuppositions" and the attempt to establish first principles in the fashion of Aristotle?
I agree with your judgement regarding non-contradiction. Should that sort of thing be counted as self-evident? — Paine
But the further corollary is that anyone who believes themselves to be coherent and consistent is presupposing the principle of non-contradiction. That is, they are presupposing that the principle of non-contradiction is true.
One can attempt to bracket the question of coherence and consistency, but when one is already writing arguments in a natural language on a philosophy forum the bracketing is merely academic. They have already accepted the onus of coherence and consistency. — Leontiskos
This isn't a testable claim, we can't go back to 1986 and, while Daryl Strawberry and Kieth Hernandez were great, I doubt the have championship baseball skills we can verify. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The other thing is that: "the best way to ensure true future beliefs is to subscribe to verificationism," isn't a claim that can be verified by verificationism. — Count Timothy von Icarus
A) Which are the “first principles” Aristotle is referring to?
B) If they are not need to be proven... their premises are universal affirmative? (According to Aristotle's syllogisms) — javi2541997
Nature is the boss, no doubt, and our experience is governed by it, which has never been contested. We still wish to understand what it is to experience, what may be the conditions by which it is possible for us, which puts us in somewhat of a jam, insofar as we ourselves determine those conditions, but whatever we come up with cannot be in contradiction with Nature. — Mww
As I’ve said, I think Chalmer’s expression of ‘what it is like to be…’ is simply a rather awkward way of referring to ‘being’. And as I’ve also said, that is not something which can be framed in scientific terms, because there’s no ‘epistemic cut’ here. We’re never outside of it or apart from it. A Wittgenstein aphorism comes to mind, ‘We feel that even if all possible scientific questions be answered, the problems of life have still not been touched at all.’
Cartesian doesn’t reign for that reason at all. It reigns as the implicit metaphysics of modern science (‘modern’ being the paradigm up until the 1927 Solvay conference.) — Wayfarer
In general, I think that, if you agree with the logic being employed, accept the inference rules, etc., if the argument is valid, and if the premises are all true, the argument should generally be persuasive.
— Count Timothy von Icarus
But it just isn't. This whole site is clearly evidence of that. Scores (if not hundreds) of people failing to convince others of positions they believe have valid logic and true premises. so the interesting question is why doesn't it work? — Isaac
I’m not seeing a mind’s eye in the brain images provided.
— javra
Really? What does one look like then? You said
No one can in any way see that aspect of themselves which visually perceives imagined phenomena via what is commonly termed “the mind’s eye”.
— javra
So presumably, at least, you've never seen one (you think no-one has). So how do you know the image I've posted isn't one? You seem to on the one hand want to say no one's ever seen one, but on the other you seem to know exactly what one should look like. — Isaac
But physical sciences don't exclude the first person as far as I can tell.
— wonderer1
There is the presumption that their findings are observer-independent i.e. replicable by anyone, They’re ‘third person’ in that sense. It’s an implicit assumption. — Wayfarer
What else could you do? Same as everyone, right? — Mww
Pattern recognition in neural nets. Pretty simple to explain recognition of equality these days.
Of course Plato wasn't in a position to understand this, and fabricated his ideas without sufficient basis for knowing what he was talking about.
Sometimes philosophy looks a bit like ancestor worship. — wonderer1
I’m not recognising the intellectual world you are quoiting Hands as describing — apokrisis
There is a priori knowledge derived from extant experience, but in Kant, the stipulation is made that when he talks of a priori knowledge, he means absent any and all experience. — Mww
The knowledge is prior to the experience of those events, not to experience in general. — plaque flag
I remember various appreciators of Kant stressing his realization of how actively the mind projects hypotheses. Isn't the updated version basically the denial of the blank slate ? Without the absurd denial of the reality of brain, thankfully. — plaque flag
Finding refuge in the Gettier problem? Sly dog. — apokrisis
But you were talking about the "dogmatic" institutions – you know, the places that can house so many contradictory dogmas. — apokrisis