There was never a statement that did not depend on prior experience or sensation. — Hallucinogen
So you put six beers in the fridge and see someone take three of them out. You don't know there's three left until you open the fridge door and verify it by looking. — Wayfarer
It is a distinction that seemed to made sense at the time it was hotly discussed, which was the 16th-17th centuries. That was before a modern understanding of logic was developed, which arose in the late 19th to early 20th centuries. That understanding has revealed that the distinction is an illusion - for instance that the statement '7+5=12', which Kant thought was synthetic, is not different in kind from 'all bachelors are unmarried', which Kant thought was analytic. I presume that is one of the reasons why hardly any professional philosophers discuss it any more, other than as a historical phenomenon.So, basically, I can't see how dividing all statements into either analytic or synthetic is correct. — Hallucinogen
Analytic thought produces a thesis. The existence of the thesis means that there is an antithesis. If the antithesis is also meaningful, then one can use synthesis to combine the thesis and antithesis and generate a more complete system of explanation."
I'm not sure what this means, could you give an example? — Hallucinogen
you know there's 3 beers left prior to opening the fridge door. That's all 'a priori' refers to and it's what is called an apodictic truth, i.e. cannot plausibly be denied. The rest is blather. — Wayfarer
Perhaps Jesus and passed by and turned the milk into beer, perhaps beers can breed, perhaps there was already a beer in the fridge, perhaps a wormhole opened and a beer fell through, or perhaps you miscounted the beers you put in, or the ones taken out, but anyway it is not analytic that there are 3 beers, nor a priori. — unenlightened
If you think that amounts to 'an argument', then please, go and have another beer. — Wayfarer
But if you forget how many beers were placed in the fridge, — Hallucinogen
ultimately it is those experiences of objects in the world that gets plugged into our mathematical thinking when we're learning to count as children — Hallucinogen
Kant argued that the structures of logic which organize, interpret and abstract observations were built into the human mind and were true and valid a priori. Mill, on the contrary, said that we believe them to be true because we have enough individual instances of their truth to generalize: in his words, "From instances we have observed, we feel warranted in concluding that what we found true in those instances holds in all similar ones, past, present and future, however numerous they may be". Although the psychological or epistemological specifics given by Mill through which we build our logical apparatus may not be completely warranted, his explanation still nonetheless manages to demonstrate that there is no way around Kant's a priori logic. Mill argues: "Indeed, the very principles of logical deduction are true because we observe that using them leads to true conclusions" - which is itself an a priori presupposition.
The point is that how many beers are in the fridge is not a priori, it is a contingent fact. — unenlightened
The idea that they're 'beers in fridge' is only a rhetorical device to illustrate the fact that 6-3=3 in a rather less boring manner. And that is something that is obviously know a priori - it's simply an example of a tautological truth. — Wayfarer
I put 2 rabbits in an empty hutch with some lettuce, and then see my friend take out 5 rabbits. I do not know that there are - 3 rabbits in the hutch, nor have I proved arithmetic wrong, I know they've been breeding — unenlightened
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