I pointed out that this is no more than saying that we can put a negation in front of any proposition. It's grammar masquerading as profundity. — Banno
Kant's antinomies are based on metaphysical speculations. It's not merely a grammatical matter; the grammar reflects what is imaginable. Any speculative idea may be true or false, or at least so we might think. Scientific theories themselves are never proven; they can, and often do, turn out to be wrong. — Janus
is utterly hollow. You keep saying nothing of consequence, as if it were relevant. — Banno
'It' has sure done a lot of 'appearing' to you for something which is other than it appears. — Isaac
I suspect that precious few academic philosophers nowadays would count themselves Kantian. If you want a more sophisticated counterargument, you might first produce a more sophisticated argument. That is, it's not clear what is being posited here, by the OP or by your good self. — Banno
I have read a couple of his books. — Banno
Are you referring to Innatism, Enactivism, Kant's a priori intuition, etc, in that life has evolved in synergy with the world for at least 3.5 billion years. I agree, if you are. — RussellA
I see things when I am asleep. — I like sushi
This must be quite a skill. If I find you sleeping and held a stick in front of your face you would able to see it. I bet your peeking. — Richard B
Yeah, but we can move (have moved...) on. That very differentiation of how things appear as against how they are can be seen as a misapprehension of how language works. That's the lesson of Wittgenstein, Austin, and so on. — Banno
Of course. He makes use of Hegel, and is quite amusing (snuffle, pull t-shirt, whip nose on forefinger.) That's so much more interesting than talking about Hegel. — Banno
...and no reason to think that it might be other than it appears. Kant is just using language badly.
I don't mind Zizek. — Banno
The significance is no more than recognising that the question remains unanswered, indeed, unanswerable. — Banno
Janus points to reification as an example, while I was pointing out that, the mere fact that we can negate any proposition tells us nothing about how things are. — Banno
It would be a shame to mistake such grammatical observations for metaphysics or epistemics. — Banno
Then presumably there is an idea that negates "every idea contains the seeds of its own negation"...? — Banno
Not sure what your point is here. My purpose was to point out that "progress" is an attitude rather than a fact, that Pinker's error is to treat it as a fact, an error that ↪Jamal
to some extent shares in his criticism of Pinker. — Banno
The kids who took it as a given that things would get worse had little motivation to try to make things better. It will be the kids who think things can improve who make a positive difference to what happens. So the myth of progress is methodological. — Banno
Humans do this all the time, albeit not necessarily on the extreme scale shown in the antinomies, in that no matter what anybody says, from deities to theoretical physics, odds are that somebody else will find something wrong with it. — Mww
What do you think?
By transcendental realism I understand 'the inquiry of how reality must be in order for scientific models to be possible'. — 180 Proof
As to why not transcendental realism, is the assignment of a mere conception alone to validate a physical object, and as we all know, conception alone is in no way sufficient for empirical knowledge. On the other hand, the fact of perception makes explicit the reality necessary for its cause, which makes the thing in itself a necessary antecedent condition, even if nothing can be known of it in itself, insofar as it is the representation only, of the thing in itself, that is. — Mww
If #1…..not so sure a reality is a collective representation.
If #2…..real, and indeterminable.
If #3….that object which appears to us is determinable/knowable. The object in itself is the object as it doesn’t appear, hence is not determinable/knowable.
————- — Mww
“…. The schema of reality is existence in a determined time….”
“…. For I can say only of a thing in itself that it exists without relation to the senses and experience….”
“…. we can have no cognition of an object, as a thing in itself, but only as an object of sensible intuition, that is, as phenomenon…”
Put them together, you get an affirmation that the thing in itself denotes an existence in a determined time. — Mww
If there is no direct knowledge of the world, but only of its representations, there is no need for a dual world. There is one world affecting the senses, half of a dual aspect, and the system by which it is understood, the other half. — Mww
IF Kant is an "empirical realist",
and if "empirical" denotes how something is experienced or appears to us
and if Kant's ding-an-sich, or "in itself", denotes reality,
THEN, for the "empirical realist", appearances (i.e. "phenomena") are reality – or only aspects of reality;
THEREFORE, "for us"-"in itself" is a distinction without a difference either epistemically or onticly.
My re-question:
Where does my thinking about (the implications of) Kant's "empirical realism" go wrong? :chin: — 180 Proof
There is of course the basic dualistic character of Kant's philosophy in the sense of phenomena/ noumena or for us/ in itself, but that just reflects the ineliminably dualistic nature of all our thinking, and in no way entails substance dualism. — Janus
I read Kant's "dualistic thinking" as (an attempt at) 'ontologizing epistemology' (i.e. reify knowing) by designating "for us" the tip "phenomena" of the iceberg "in itself" above the water line "noumena". So on what grounds does Kant posit the "in itself" from which he then conjures-up the "for us" to 'retro-construct' with various "transcendental" sleights-of-mind? — 180 Proof
Without consciousness there would, practically speaking, be no world, for the world exists as such only in so far as it is consciously reflected and consciously expressed by a psyche. Consciousness is a precondition of being. — Carl Jung
My question was an attempt to spell out why Jung would say this. I was attempting to interpret the OP. As I asked already, does Jung mean by this that consciousness is a pre-condition for the existence of rocks? I think that it is clearly an absurd suggestion. — Wayfarer
You should tell that to all those Buddhist activists who go around liberating caged animals. — Wayfarer
If you look at just about any dictionary, one of the definitions of "being" will be "a living thing." My point is not that Wayfarer is right in this instance, only that his use of the word "being" is not unreasonable. — T Clark
I've already agreed that being and existence are different concepts. — Jamal
the word is being — Jamal
I am not familiar with the Black Notebooks or the "Rector's Address. If Heidegger did, and continued to, identify his project with antisemitism then I would say that was a personal failing that does not detract from his philosophy.Don't know about that. See this. — Wayfarer
Sure. I accept that. I've never claimed any expertise in Heidegger, but 180 brought it up. I know that he placed humans in a priviledged position regarding Dasein and I think he would differentiate sentient beings from things. (I'm reading up on What Is a Thing but I must admit hesitancy about Heidegger due to his nazism.) — Wayfarer
Oh, you are just after an etymology. It's just "in", from PIE "en", I think.
Hence my puzzling as to what is "in", when used in the context of idealism and realism. — Banno
So idealism holds that everything is inside one's body, while realism holds that everything is outside one's body.
How odd. — Banno
If idealism were true that would not change; the experience would remain exactly the same even if the understanding changed. Unless you are speaking of solipsism, If the world were thought to be fundamentally mind our minds would still be understood to be in that universal mind, and yet that whole mind (which would include, but would not be limited to, the minds of others) would not be understood to be in my mind, — Janus
Unless you believed that those beginnings implied influences that were deemed demonic afterwards. — Paine
One of things I find interesting in Jung is that some portion of the 'scientific method' has a parent people are uncomfortable talking about. — Paine
