The above realism are a subset of Philosophical Realism:
To be more specific, Philosophical realism claims that reality and things exist absolute independent of the human conditions [mind, beliefs, opinion, etc.]; i.e. they exists regardless of whether humans exists or not.Philosophical realism – is the view that a certain kind of thing (ranging widely from abstract objects like numbers to moral statements to the physical world itself) has mind-independent existence,
i.e. that it exists even in the absence of any mind perceiving it or that its existence is not just a mere appearance in the eye of the beholder.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophical_realism
Philosophical Realism [PR] is an evolutionary default [i.e. it is basis and primitive] and clung upon as a dogmatic ideology; upon serious reflections on the many negative baggage of PR, many philosophers since philosophy emerged do not accept PR as absolute but insist realism can only be relative.
One of the official opposition of philosophical realism as a dogmatic ideology was Kant who first introduced the term 'realism'; Kant named his antirealism 'Transcendental Realism" for the purposes of his Critique of Pure Reason.
The ideology of absolute philosophical realism later has many subsets, i.e. direct [naive] and indirect realism, scientific realism and others.
There are those who argued ignorantly, Kant's Transcendental Realism is different from Philosophical Realism.
Obviously if one ignorantly [based on strawman] ask AI from one's biasness, ChatGPT will simply give answers from that ignorant perspective.Atla wrote: ↑Sat Jun 22, 2024 5:24 am Try to make an argument that makes sense in English.
Philosophical realism isn't transcendental realism.
For example [from ChatGpt]:
Conclusion
Forms of realism such as scientific realism, critical realism, internal realism, phenomenal realism, and epistemological realism, differ from Kant's transcendental realism in various ways. They often either reject the direct identification of phenomena with noumena or recognize the role of cognitive and social factors in shaping our understanding of reality. These distinctions place them outside the scope of what Kant criticizes as transcendental realism.
My argument that Transcendental Realism is the same as Philosophical Realism is based on the fundamental substance and principles not on their forms.
Here is ChatGpt answer to the specific and related matter;
The forms are secondary, the critical [primary] element here is the claim that whether, it is transcendental, philosophical scientific, direct [naive], indirect realism, their targeted reality and things exist absolutely [unconditionally] independent of the human conditions [mind-independent] to the extent that they exist regardless of whether there are human or not.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sat Jun 22, 2024 7:59 am The above poster relied on ChatGpt but he himself is too narrow and shallow minded in his interaction with ChatGpt.
There are many forms of realism and we need to be very specific when dealing with each form of realism.
While Kant rejected Transcendent Realism, he accept Empirical Realism.
So cannot simply conflate the various forms of realism as one general view but need to consider the nuances.
My intended point as presented by ChatGpt [wR]:
ChatGpt wrote:Yes, when considering the basic principle of mind-independent existence alone, it is reasonable to claim that philosophical realism, Kant's transcendental realism, scientific realism, and naive realism share this foundational idea. This principle asserts that external things exist independently of human perception or cognition.
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By focusing solely on the principle of mind-independent existence, it is clear that all these forms of realism share the view that external things exist regardless of human presence or perception. This commonality highlights their agreement on the fundamental nature of reality being independent of the human mind, despite their differences in other philosophical aspects.
Thus my point:
Kants' Transcendental Realism, Philosophical Realism, Scientific Realism, Naive Realism, Indirect Realism are fundamentally the SAME whilst their forms and descriptions are obviously different.