Not all senses of "categorical error" are commensurate. — creativesoul
Correct, which is why I mentioned Gilbert Ryle. I figure error in semantics or error in reason are the only two worth talking about. And because language philosophy is (insert pejorative terminology here), the only error worth a damn in philosophical discourse is grounded in pure reason.
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what counts as a category is completely and utterly determined by us — creativesoul
I suppose that’s right enough, although I would offer that we determine
whatthey are, but not
that they are; the former presupposes the latter. Nonetheless, all philosophy is theoretical, and if it should be the case that a foundational tenet of a particular theory is given as merely a condition for that which follows from it necessarily, and disqualifies such condition from any empirical determinant for it, it must be considered as existing in its entirety prior to being named as such, by the rational agencies that employ it in the normal course of its mental events, in accordance with the theory. The onus then falls on the opponent of the theory, to falsify the tenet by arguing successfully in the negative. He does his dialectical opposition no justice by merely claiming fallacious rationality used in the construction of the theory, but rather, is required to give qualifying justifications for it. It may be interesting to note that, at least since Aristotle, no one has been able to promote sufficient reason to nullify the need for, and function of, the categories. Doesn’t make the theory or its tenets fact, or even irrefutably the case, but standing the test of two millennia of argument is still pretty damn good.
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I seek to discover that which exists in it's entirety prior to our discovery process, therefore prior to the naming and descriptive practices commonly called common language use... — creativesoul
Cool. Let me know what you find? We can compare it to what has already been found. Or found acceptable, at any rate.
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For anything that exists in it's entirety prior to our naming and descriptive practices qualifies for that which exists in and of itself(Noumena). — creativesoul
Noumena is untenable. I've already offered adequate argument for that conclusion. It's been left sorely neglected. — creativesoul
In the first, the parenthetical suggest a “for instance”, as in, “that which exists in its entirety exists in and of itself, like for instance, noumena”.
In the second, noumena are claimed to be untenable, which of course, they are, for us.
By association, it follows that because categories exist in and of themselves, they are untenable noumena. This is false. Or, “That’s not only not right, it’s not even wrong!!” (Thanks, Herr Pauli!!!) Categories are neither untenable, nor noumena. In addition, I haven’t seen on these pages any adequate argument for noumena being untenable except from yours truly. Actually, him truly, me being the poor messenger. And because I probably would have agreed, and so remembered, if you’d presented adequate argument, I’m going to go ahead and say you haven’t. But surreptitiously with my fingers crossed.
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Logical forms are existentially dependent upon common language use. — creativesoul
No, I think not. Logical content is dependent on language use; logical form, re: the Greek laws of comprehensible, rational thought, are not:
“....Pure intuition consequently contains merely the form under which something is intuited, and pure conception only the form of thought in general. Only pure intuitions and pure conceptions are possible a priori...”
A = A, e.g., is the pure form the content must take when language fills out the form, to accomplish comprehensible, rational thought, and thereafter, comprehensible, rational communication. You can fill out the job application with any ol’ information you want, but your paycheck might end up in Alaska, just as you can fill in the logical forms any way you want, but your cognition “bird” might be everybody else’s cognition “bathtub”.
We can move on, if you like.