Kant’s conviction that the existence of incongruent counterparts proved that “space in general does not belong to the properties or relations of things in themselves” (4: 484) is not easy to understand, but his basic argument in the 1768 essay is that Leibniz’s view does not enable one to distinguish between a left handed glove and a right handed glove, insofar as the relations of all the parts to one another are the same in both cases. Yet if God had created just one glove, it would have been one or the other. Hence space does not depend on relations between things in space. Newton’s conception of space as a huge container does not contribute to the solution of the problem: Consider a container in which a single glove is floating. Is it a right-handed glove or a left-handed glove? We can insert various new items into this space-container, e.g., an anorak, a scarf, a shoe, but only the insertion of a human observer into the space will permit an answer. Space, Kant, decides, is related to directionality or orientation. The human observer experiences himself as intersected by three planes and as having three sets of “sides”, which he describes as up and down, back and forward, and right and left. Right-handedness and left-handedness are not merely anthropic concepts since nature itself insists on handedness in twining plants and the shells of snails (2: 380). But which direction is right and which is left can only be established by a conscious, embodied being. As he expresses it in the Prolegomena, “The difference between similar and equal things which are not congruent…cannot be made intelligible by any concept, but only by the relation to the right and left hands, which immediately refers to intuition” (4: 286). How spheroid beings with hands would distinguish between “front” and “back” is not however clear. It is not clear whether this orientational analysis implies that wherever there is space there must also be sentient beings with pairs of incongruent parts, as well as top-bottom and back-front asymmetry. — SEP on Leibniz
this basic argument in the 1768 essay is that Leibniz’s view does not enable one to distinguish between a left handed glove and a right handed glove, insofar as the relations of all the parts to one another are the same in both cases. — SEP on Leibniz
Yet if God had created just one glove, it would have been one or the other. — SEP on Leibniz
Right-handedness and left-handedness are not merely anthropic concepts since nature itself insists on handedness in twining plants and the shells of snails. But which direction is right and which is left can only be established by a conscious, embodied being. As he expresses it in the Prolegomena, “The difference between similar and equal things which are not congruent…cannot be made intelligible by any concept, but only by the relation to the right and left hands, which immediately refers to intuition” — SEP on Leibniz
It is not clear whether this orientational analysis implies that wherever there is space there must also be sentient beings with pairs of incongruent parts, as well as top-bottom and back-front asymmetry. — SEP on Leibniz
On what basis do you make this distinction? Is it a matter of experiencing the world through a human body? Or is there something objective about it? — frank
Ok, so now to finally answer your question!
On what basis do you make this distinction? Is it a matter of experiencing the world through a human body? Or is there something objective about it?
— frank
The objective basis is 'the thing itself'. We have 'hands' in themselves. How we interpret them is up to us. We could call them "quack and bark" hands if we wanted. We could say that hands involve the forearm. We part and parcel our interpretation of reality as we wish. As long as our interpretation is not contradicted by the thing in itself's existence (I can cut my hands off and they will still work does NOT match reality) then we're good. — Philosophim
Adding more objects doesn't fix that. So there is no "up" in itself. — frank
There is a distance between a set point in itself, and another set point in itself. "Up" is an interpreted relation between our observation view point, and that relation. So yes, "Up" does not exist in itself, but the Earth, and the distance to space for example, does exist in itself. — Philosophim
On what basis do you make this distinction? Is it a matter of experiencing the world through a human body? Or is there something objective about it? — frank
I think of myself as having two halves and I know the left is the side I don't write with. I think that's how I tell the difference. Is it objective? It's certainly an intersubjective agreement shared by culture - a tool we use to organise space. While there might be some who are confused as to which is which. Those who can tell will always agree as to which is which. Does that make it objective? Of course, further complicating this is that left or right change depending upon one's position or perspective - they are not like compass points. — Tom Storm
But which direction is right and which is left can only be established by a conscious, embodied being. — SEP on Leibniz
Yes, the question is whether or not space has mind-independent directions. That question doesn't appear to be answered by noting that we have hands. I think you're agreeing that space does not have any innate directionality (in the same way there is no unmoving reference point out there). Adding more objects doesn't fix that. — frank
I call any geometrical figure, or group of points, 'chiral', and say that it has chirality if its image in a plane mirror, ideally realized, cannot be brought to coincide with itself. — Lord Kelvin
Ok, so the glove can fit a right hand or left hand — Philosophim
If the gloves have palm and back, then you can certainly tell which is left and which is right. — Banno
Ok, so the glove can fit a right hand or left hand
— Philosophim
I'm not sure I follow. As Banno says:
If the gloves have palm and back, then you can certainly tell which is left and which is right. — cherryorchard
If the question is whether 'left' and 'right' exist independently of any specific spatial observation point, I can't imagine how they could. — cherryorchard
Because the authors were not talking about gloves with palms and backs. They were specifically providing examples of gloves that had no distinct indicators that they were for left or right hands. Think of disposable plastic gloves that medical providers use if that helps. — Philosophim
The supposition is that somehow therefore consciousness is essential to telling left from right, but the case for this cannot, I think, be made. All that is needed is an arbitrary point from which to assess the chirality of the glove. — Banno
I don’t see why we need to imagine the glove floating in an empty container. Nor would the addition of a human spectator answer the question of whether it is a left or right glove – it is neither. — cherryorchard
But only a conscious being can construct a point of origin or use. — Philosophim
Quadruped? That's my problem then. Not enough feet.Being in a quadruped body is the basis for the distinction. — frank
You reached it as a conclusion to some argument? This?Directionality is something we give to space. It doesn't have that on its own. Some responders to this thread have said that this is blatantly obvious, others like me, arrived at it intellectually... — frank
It's wrong. If the glove has a palm and a back then we can tell its chirality. If it does not have a palm and back then inserting an "observer" does not help. The judgement will depend on which side the glove is seen from, not on the fact of there being an observer. It's not necessary to "insert an observer" to settle the issue; simply choosing a point on this or that side of the glove will suffice.Consider a container in which a single glove is floating. Is it a right-handed glove or a left-handed glove? We can insert various new items into this space-container, e.g., an anorak, a scarf, a shoe, but only the insertion of a human observer into the space will permit an answer. — SEP on Leibniz
This looks to be a play on "use". Only conscious beings construct. But that tells us nothing about space.But only a conscious being can construct a point of origin or use. — Philosophim
Your observer is reduced to a point. That is all that is needed.How can you have choosing going on with nobody to choose? — frank
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