I am not sure what you mean by a transcendent law. What do you mean by transcendent reality?
Define transcendent.
And transcendent cannot be defined as that by which the brain cognizes reality into a coherent whole, without sufficient justification that pure transcendental reason hasn’t already provided the ground for exactly that.
Which is possible iff the relevant definitions are inconsistent with each other.
And there hasn’t yet been mention in the thesis, of principles, under which the transcendent laws would have to be subsumed.
Wouldn’t you say that is Kant’s standard distinction? — Bob Ross
The OP is about a law which pertains to reality as it were in-itself—i.e., a transcendent law. — Bob Ross
So it is that in Kant, transcendent relates to experience, not consciousness
Besides, and I’m surprised you’d do such a thing….you can’t use the word being defined, in the definition of it. I get nothing of any value from transcendent being defined as that which transcends.
For instance, when you say, “that by which the brain cognizes reality is transcendental”, is the inconsistency wherein it is reason alone that cognizes anything at all transcendentally, the brain being merely some unknown material something necessary for our intelligence in general.
Not that I don’t admire your proclivity for stepping outside the lines. It’s just that you’re asking me to upset some rather well stabilized applecarts, but without commensurate benefit.
In Kant, transcendent is juxtapositional to immanent, with respect to experience, whereas transcendental merely indicates the mode in which reason constructs and employs pure a priori cognitions
. There are certainly observable and provable regularities in reality. However, there are also huge part of its operation which are random and chaos
the weather changes
some part of human behavior and psychology
some of the principles in QM
Law means it works 100% as laid out without fail. If there was 1 fail out of billions of events, then it is not a law. It then is a rule.Sure. We have evidence to support that there is randomness in reality—how does that negate the OP? — Bob Ross
They say that the weather changes has been much more unpredictable recent times, so it is harder to predict the weather effects. And there are the other natural phenomenon such as volcano eruptions, hurricanes and earth quakes etc. You cannot predict the date, time and location of these phenomenon, and how they would unfold themselves on the earth by some law.Change is not per se an example of randomness: the weather changing changes according to natural laws. — Bob Ross
This sounds circular. You are deciding something through reason but you also deploy principle reason? It sounds ambiguous and tautology.E.g., one cannot decide to do something through reason without deploying principles reason (no matter how poorly deployed it may be). — Bob Ross
What do you mean by this? Could you elaborate more on the detail and ground for the statement? Does everyone's brain then all works exactly the same way to each other when confronted an event?The brain, however, is constrained by natural laws. — Bob Ross
What’s the difference between the two in your view? — Bob Ross
transcendent is that which is beyond our experience — Bob Ross
…..constructing such an experience. — Bob Ross
…..the preconditions for constructing such an experience. — Bob Ross
….the brain is the representation of what is ontologically “responsible” for reason. — Bob Ross
Law means it works 100% as laid out without fail. If there was 1 fail out of billions of events, then it is not a law. It then is a rule.
Is any law transcendent? In what sense?
All laws are the product of human reasoning
They say that the weather changes has been much more unpredictable recent times, so it is harder to predict the weather effects. And there are the other natural phenomenon such as volcano eruptions, hurricanes and earth quakes etc. You cannot predict the date, time and location of these phenomenon, and how they would unfold themselves on the earth by some law.
This sounds circular. You are deciding something through reason but you also deploy principle reason? It sounds ambiguous and tautology.
Many believe that human reasoning is just a nature for its survival. Deployment of principles reason? Is it not natural capacity which evolved for thousands of years via the history of human survival, civilization and evolution?
What do you mean by this? Could you elaborate more on the detail and ground for the statement?
Does everyone's brain then all works exactly the same way to each other when confronted an event?
Experience is cognition by means of conjoined perceptions; consciousness is a natural human condition, represented as the totality of representations. Sometimes called a faculty, but it doesn’t have faculty-like function, so….not so much in T.I..
This is a kind of categorical error, in that when talking of the brain, the discourse is scientific, in which representation has no place, but when talking of representation, the discourse is philosophical, in which the brain has no place.
Nothing untoward with the fact the brain is necessary for every facet of human intelligence, but there remains whether or not it is sufficient for it. Until there comes empirical knowledge of the brain’s rational functionality, best not involve it in our metaphysical speculations.
Immanent has to do with empirical cognitions, hence experience; transcendental has to do with a priori cognitions, hence possible experience. Transcendent, then, has do to with neither the one nor the other, hence no experience whatsoever.
Not quite. What you described is not the nature of a law but, rather, how we pragmatically determine what we think is a law. — Bob Ross
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