We need something 'in itself' to represent.
— Philosophim
Why? — Banno
How do you represent something unless that 'something' is there? — Philosophim
So there's that. We can't know what a "thing in itself" is. But presumably we can know what the thing is. So what purpose is there in this philosophical construct, this phantasm, this thing-in-itself? You can't say anything about it, so the story goes - and yet the pages hereabouts are full of it.Generally, the debate is, "Can we know what a thing in itself is?" Can we know what reality is, apart from our interpretations of that reality? And the answer is "No". — Philosophim
Why not drop the thing-in-itself in favour of the thing? At least then we can say something. — Banno
And once you represent it, it is the thing...Trying to figure anything more out about the thing in itself is pointless. You can't, you can only represent it. — Philosophim
And once you represent it, it is the thing...
I've never been able to see the point. It seems to me to conceal more than reveal. — Banno
Nor, while we are at it, is it clear how it applies to gloves. Is the supposition that a glove-in-itself, about which we can say nothing, is neither left nor right handed? — Banno
I don't understand how.Its a logical footnote to prevent solipsism is all. — Philosophim
Didn't you want to use it in order to explain something about gloves?Best not to overanalyze it or elevate it to have any deeper meaning then that. — Philosophim
Best not to overanalyze it or elevate it to have any deeper meaning then that.
— Philosophim
Didn't you want to use it in order to explain something about gloves? — Banno
Its a logical footnote to prevent solipsism is all.
— Philosophim
I don't understand how. — Banno
Witt's thoughts are in TLP 6.3111. — frank
6.3 Logical research means the investigation of all regularity. And
outside logic all is accident.
6.31 The so-called law of induction cannot in any case be a logical
law, for it is obviously a signicant proposition.And therefore
it cannot be a law a priori either.
6.32 The law of causality is not a law but the form of a law.*
6.321 Law of Causality is a class name. And as in mechanics there
are, for instance, minimum-laws, such as that of least action, so
in physics there are causal laws, laws of the causality form.
6.3211 Men had indeed an idea that there must be a law of least action, before they knew exactly how it ran. (Here, as always,
the a priori certain proves to be something purely logical.)
I don't think I uniquely endow space with directionality. I think directions come from the fact that each person has a POV from a body that's easily divided into quadrants. — frank
but chirality is the feature of the world that I wanted to point out as both a mathematical and empirical phenomenon which can account for the original question — Moliere
If directions come from the self, or cogito — Moliere
I gravitate towards it and would prefer the point which seems harder to prove be shown -- the idea that directionality is somehow inhering in us alone, and when we die it all goes away. — Moliere
"Left" and "Right" seem very obviously conventional, just like "up" and "down" -- anything relative to a speaker. — Moliere
It was: how do you tell your left from your right? I don't believe that answer is found in any math, but if you think it is, could you explain how? — frank
I'm looking at the TLP and don't see that sentence — Moliere
chirality gives a straightforward example from math which explains how we're able to differentiate left from right — Moliere
I mean this pragmatic theory of directionality, and want more arguments for why it should be thought of disappearing when we all die. — Moliere
Could you lay that out in broad strokes? I don't think a description of chirality will distinguish right from left for you. For that, you need a reference. All reference points are chosen by us for our purposes. — frank
I think you'll find that once you explore the math you mentioned a little further. — frank
I don't understand how this relates to left/right-handedness. I think it's only habituation, and nothing else -- nothing about space at all. — Moliere
How does habituation work if a person doesn't have any innate sense of leftness vs rightness? I'm asking. — frank
"A right-hand glove could be put on a left hand if it could be turned round in four-dimensional space.". — frank
Extra dimensions are not needed. A right-handed glove can be put on a left hand if it is turned inside out. — Banno
And that relation is just orientation. It is not consciousness. — Banno
Well, yes - that answers your OP, doesn't it?Imagine a stone and a boulder on a far away planet. Is the stone to the left or to the right of the boulder? — frank
You and I sit opposite each other at a table. On my right is a knife, on my left, a fork. The fork is on your right. Does that mean there is no objective truth as to the location of the fork? — Banno
How does habituation work if a person doesn't have any innate sense of leftness vs rightness? I'm asking. — frank
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.