So imagining an empty forest, with no observer to hear the tree fall, still amounts to a perspective. What would any scene or object be like, from no perspective? — Wayfarer
There is no such thing as the world in itself. You don't get to take anti-realist assumptions for granted. — jkop
Why even suppose there is a real world if you can't know anything about it? — Marchesk
I understand by the transcendental idealism of all appearances the doctrine that they are all together to be regarded as mere representations and not things in themselves, and accordingly that space and time are only sensible forms of our intuition, but not determinations given for themselves or conditions of objects as things in themselves. To this idealism is opposed transcendental realism, which regards space and time as something given in themselves (independent of our sensibility). The transcendental realist therefore represents outer appearances (if their reality is conceded) as things in themselves, which would exist independently of us and our sensibility and thus would also be outside us according to pure concepts of the understanding. (CPR, A369) — Kant
I assert that nature existed prior to our existence, it exists independently of our observations, and it will be around after philosophers have departed the scene at some convenient moment of time in the near future. — Bitter Crank
(Kant once remarked) 'If I take away the thinking subject, the whole material world must vanish, as this world is nothing but the phenomenal appearance in the sensibility of our own subject, and is a species of this subject's representations.' … [An] objection would run: 'Everyone knows that the earth, and a fortiori the universe, existed for a long time before there were any living beings, and therefore any perceiving subjects. But according to what Kant has just been quoted as saying, that is impossible.'
Schopenhauer's defence of Kant on this score was twofold. First, the objector has not understood to the very bottom the Kantian demonstration that time is one of the forms of our sensibility. The earth, say, as it was before there was life, is a field of empirical enquiry in which we have come to know a great deal; its reality is no more being denied than is the reality of perceived objects in the same room. The point is, the whole of the empirical world in space and time is the creation of our understanding, which apprehends all the objects of empirical knowledge within it as being in some part of that space and at some part of that time: and this is as true of the earth before there was life as it is of the pen I am now holding a few inches in front of my face and seeing slightly out of focus as it moves across the paper.
This, incidentally, illustrates a difficulty in the way of understanding which transcendental idealism has permanently to contend with: the assumptions of 'the inborn realism which arises from the original disposition of the intellect' enter unawares into the way in which the statements of transcendental idealism are understood, so that these statements appear faulty in ways in which, properly understood, they are not.
Such realistic assumptions so pervade our normal use of concepts that the claims of transcendental idealism disclose their own non-absurdity only after difficult consideration, whereas criticisms of them at first appear cogent which on examination are seen to rest on confusion.
So you can know a great deal about it, while still not knowing what it really is. — Wayfarer
But in Kant's system, knowledge only occurs at the level of judgement, right? Since the noumenal world (i.e. the world in itself) epistemologically and ontologically precedes the functions of judgment, it literally can't be known. — Aaron R
So I think distinction between phenomena and noumena is descended from the Platonic differentiation between appearance and reality. But it's not a dichotomy or an absolute dualism; it's more that the phenomenal domain is how the noumenal realm manifests on the level of appearances; its 'sensible form', as Kant would say. — Wayfarer
If by a noumenon we understand a thing insofar as it is not an object of our sensible intuition, because we abstract from the manner of our intuition of then this is a noumenon in the negative sense. But if we understand by that an object of a non-sensible intuition then we assume a special kind of intuition, namely intellectual intuition, which, however, is not our own, and the possibility of which we cannot understand, and this would be the noumenon in a positive sense. — Kant, Critique of Pure Reason
I think the best answer is just to be honest and admit there isn't any evidence for the claims realism makes. — The Great Whatever
Basic epistemological and metaphysical questions like these don't have good answers, and not because they're meaningless but just because they're hard. — The Great Whatever
noumena would be the object of a purely intellectual intuition, which is a faculty that Kant believes we do not possess. — Aaron R
I am one of those unsophisticated ignoramuses that tends to lean in the direction of "there anyway" realism. — Aaron R
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