Hey now. It worked for me, and I’m richer, smarter and immeasurably better looking. — Mww
But ol’ Johnny was pretty smart, so Kant might have enabled him to see the transcendental light. — Mww
The most prominent relation Kant had with Locke’s philosophy, as far as I know, is the notion of innate knowledge, which Kant rejected. — Mww
As far as empirical realism is concerned, Kant maintains that for Locke’s version, and Hume’s as well, space and time must be properties of things, whereas…as we all know…Kant restricts space and time to our own internal faculty of intuition. For an infinitely divisible yet immaterial thing to be a property, is absurd, for Kant. — Mww
Hardly from god. Kant’s motto, circa 1784: sapere aude.
From the nature of human intelligence.
Speculative metaphysics means you gotta stop somewhere in formulating tenets supporting your theory. Infinite regress on one hand, inevitable contradiction on the other, in going too far. — Mww
Both concepts thought transcendentally. — Mww
No. He is clearly not referring to any presentable object outside of him. A stationary object involves the intuition of time & space, it is a presentable object. — Sirius
Please read Kant for who he is, not who you want him to be. If you like phenomenology, fine, but don't project it onto Kant unnecessarily. — Sirius
All of which is almost to observe that the rules of language are all of them post hoc; inferred after the fact — Banno
I do not think that, for whatever it's worth — AmadeusD
This is why I mentioned Kant's refutation of idealism, which he added to his 2nd edition of CPR. Here is where he makes strange claims in regards to noumena
I am conscious of my existence as determined in time. All time determination presupposes something permanent in perception. But this permanent something cannot be something within me, precisely because my existence can be determined in time only by this permanent something.Therefore perception of this permanent something is possible only through a thing outside me and not through mere presentation of a thing outside me
— CPR, B276, translation of Pluhar (the best)
From this quote, it's clear the ground of our representations, all of phenomena, can't be an object of phenomena. It must be an object in the realm of noumena & it must exist in order for empirical realism to be true. — Sirius
You don't recognize how Trump is obsessed with oil? "Drill, baby, drill." And, "We will export American energy all over the world." In Trump's mind, oil and power are equivalent. That's why he's mad at Europeans who buy Russian oil. — Metaphysician Undercover
Trump wants more oil. — Metaphysician Undercover
Fair enough - my knowledge is roughly the same, except extended over two decades as I've had a family who is a set of friends of my family, 'escape' and return. — AmadeusD
Yeah.... "how doooo they do it?" is the one question modern people in industrialized nations ask themselves with the most fake ass expression on their face. Comedy at its best. — Christoffer
Or else it must distinguish the more real from the less real (or something like that). — Leontiskos
You left out the most important thing—the “agree with me” part. — T Clark
It's interesting to know also that "Metaphysics" isn't even a precise way to label his book, it's terminology after the fact. — ProtagoranSocratist
The contents of this thread, and all the other metaphysics threads, demonstrate it’s not simple at all — T Clark
That Aristotle's work so named is concerned with similar enough things that starting with Aristotle isn't bad. — Moliere
What is the way to understand what 'metaphysics' means? Listen to Clarendon says on it? — Moliere
If nothing else, we agree the notion of solipsism is empty, thus attempts to disprove it are foolish. At least from the perspective of our mutual reference material. — Mww
My current position is that I have no choice but to accept the reality I’m in and that humans are sense-making creatures who use language (and other tools) to manage their environment. It's likely we don’t have the capacity to access a Capital-T Truth, and philosophy is perhaps best avoided, as it tends only to lead to 1) convoluted attempts to justify seemingly impossible beliefs or 2) endless confusion and self-reflexivity. :wink: — Tom Storm
Yes, that's true. Have you come to any metaphysical conclusions yourself? — Tom Storm
You can understand why people find theism attractive in all this, since it seems to effectively provide a grounding that resolves the confusions and tautologies created by anti-foundationalist views. — Tom Storm
Hilary Lawson, a minor British philosopher, argues that we can’t avoid the problem of self-reflexivity in modern philosophy, our theories and claims inevitably turn back on themselves. His reponse is to say, so what! — Tom Storm
Nothing we justify ever rises above our own ways of justifying and that includes this statement. — Tom Storm
Hmm… explain the difference in this case. — T Clark
As I have followed along in this thread, it struck me that solipsism, the simulation argument, and belief in God are equivalent metaphysically. — T Clark
For Kant, in his time, the statement that awareness of self required the existence of "exterior" things was his argument against solipsism. — Paine
