The second they (stimuli) hit the sense organs, they become representations to us, unless you argue that what effects us from "outside" corresponds exactly to what we sense, perceive, etc. That's fine, but it's not Kant. — Xtrix
Yes, what effects us from outside corresponds exactly to what we sense. That which effects our eyes exactly corresponds to what we see; that which effects our ears corresponds exactly to what we hear, etc. We have to have consistency between incoming data and what the cognitive system works with.
The stimuli become sensation (rods and cones, eardrum, pressure...), that which becomes an appearance (optic nerve, those little tiny bones....I forget the name, skin), from a sensation is a representation of it.
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So how are representations created? By the brain and nervous system on the "occasion of sense," through our cognitive faculty. — Xtrix
The brain and nervous system have nothing to do with a speculative epistemological system. Just as intuition, conceptions and representations have nothing to do with cognitive neuroscience. Two different domains of investigation. When it comes right down to life and living, all our mental mechanics are done by the brain, but that is soooooo boring for the philosopher.
As to how representations are created: “....we have not here anything to do....”. We don’t know., and it really doesn’t matter, in a purely speculative epistemological theory.
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Saying we can't create representations "outside of us" is not true -- there's all kinds of things outside me: trees, books, rivers, anything at all. — Xtrix
All kinds of things are outside us, but they are not representations, they are real, physical objects of experience, because they have particular names in accordance with the conceptions understood as belonging to them, thus cognized as a certain thing.
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Yes, we perceive objects. We don't perceive objects in themselves. — Xtrix
I just quoted Kant as saying that’s exactly what we do.
“...objects are quite unknown to us in themselves, and what we call outward objects, are nothing else but mere representations of our sensibility...”
Object are quite unknown to us in themselves says exactly the same as objects in themselves are quite unknown to us.
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I think this stems from the above and not using sensation and perception in the same way I am. Again, I consider them phenomena, and by phenomena I mean literally anything experienceable. — Xtrix
Fine. Go right ahead. That’s the easy way out of digging the subtleties from the theory. Literally anything experienceable is a possible experience. No merely possible experience can be a phenomenon. A merely possible experience will have a merely possible phenomenon as it condition. I can think swimming the English Channel, and it is experienceable, but the perception, the sensation and indeed the very phenomenon, are entirely absent.
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I don't see how "things" and "representations" are different. — Xtrix
“....The capacity for receiving representations (receptivity) through the mode in which we are affected by objects, is called sensibility....”
This tells you representations are a consequence of objects, or, of things, and if they are a consequence, they cannot be antecedent to or simultaneous with, that which is their cause. And don’t be confused by “receiving representations” such that they appear with the object. When conditioned by “the mode in which we are affected” makes clear all representations are generated after they are perceived.
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So whatever affects us certainly isn't empty to us -- it's any object at all, and not just trees and books but feelings, emotions, pains, thoughts, etc. — Xtrix
Again, a common misunderstanding. Books, trees, yes. Feelings, emotions, pain, thought.....no. None of those are given representations by sensibility, even if the object which causes them, may be, thus can never be empirical cognitions. Feelings are relative subjective conditions alone, and have no object of their own. You cannot draw a feeling on a piece of paper as you can draw a tree; you can only draw that which you think is responsible for that feeling.
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Imagining a pink unicorn is still an idea, yes? Imagination is an experience as well, bounded by our human limits. That's still part of phenomenology. — Xtrix
We don't care about the phenomenology. Just because Kant gave a very specific task to a relatively small part of his system doesn’t make him one. Besides, phenomena are not even used in pure reason, in which the faculty of sensibility is not in play.
Imagination is not an experience. Empirical cognition is. Imagination is at the beginning of the thought process and is below our attention, while experience is the culmination of the thought process and is quite apparent to us. While we certainly think the object of imagination, in this case the pink unicorn, such is not an experience, because it is not an empirical cognition given from an object of sense.
A pink unicorn is an idea, yes, Imagining a pink unicorn is not an idea, it is a rational activity of the thinking subject. So called because imagination is supposed to synthesize appearance with intuition, but with e.g., pink unicorns, nothing appears, which means imagination is creating a phenomenon from intuition alone without synthesizing anything, but rather, is merely combining like content. This is why we can imagine weird stuff, because understanding can find no contradictions in an object comprised of just one kind of content.
And the band played on.........