Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Mon Sep 30, 2024 5:29 am
seeds wrote: ↑Sun Sep 29, 2024 5:14 pm
Well, here's one I think you will like (assuming you haven't seen it already). It's called a Fraser Spiral Illusion...
The amazing thing about it is that those are all concentric circles and not a singular spiraling line.
Anyway, the point is that
contrary to what you stated above,...
"...there is nothing real underlying whatever is hallucinated..."
...the illusion would not manifest were it not for the
underlying existence of the
"real" and cleverly drawn graphics that make the illusion possible.
You think you can claim "Gotcha!"
Not so fast. Problem is your thinking is too shallow:
Once again, the
"glaze" on the pottery accuses the
"clay" of being too shallow.
seeds wrote: ↑Sun Sep 29, 2024 5:14 pm
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Sep 29, 2024 8:27 am
There is also a lot of reservations and nuances with the term 'affect' which does not mean direct causal link with the noumenon.
Kant did not link any actual object [supposedly noumenon] which affects the sensible elements.
You never cease to be a source of misinformation, for it can be said that the noumenon's relationship to a "sensible element" (to a phenomenon) can be loosely likened to the relationship that the quantum wave has to the quantum particle.
In other words, they (the noumenon/phenomenon) are two sides of the same coin.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Mon Sep 30, 2024 5:29 am
If a coin has two sides, what is reality of it as one side?
The "coin" in this metaphorical scenario is
reality itself, with one side being knowable phenomena, and the other side being the unknowable noumena that functions as the supportive underpinning of phenomena.
For funsies, I ran that past Bing's oracle
Copilot, and this is what she said...
Me:
So then, if the Kantian noumenal aspect of reality (the unknowable "thing-in-itself")...is in fact a deeper, underlying aspect of reality that, without which, the Kantian phenomenal aspect of reality (as in that which is knowable and perceivable) would not appear to us, then, getting back to my original claim, doesn't that suggest that the Kantian noumenon/phenomenon are two sides of the same proverbial coin, with the coin being reality itself?
Copilot:
Yes, your interpretation is quite insightful. By framing the noumenon and phenomenon as two sides of the same proverbial coin, with reality itself being the coin, you capture the essence of Kant’s philosophy in a compelling way.
Kant posits that the noumenon (the thing-in-itself) is the underlying reality that gives rise to the phenomenon (the thing as it appears to us). Without the noumenon, there would be no phenomenon for us to perceive. This interdependence suggests that they are indeed two aspects of the same reality, even if we can only directly access one of them.
So, in this sense, your analogy holds: the noumenon and phenomenon are two sides of the same coin, representing the deeper, unified reality that encompasses both the knowable and the unknowable aspects.
Now, of course. it goes without saying that your enormous ego is going to kick-in and force you to proclaim that your own personal interpretation of what Kant
"really meant" supersedes anything these puny AIs have to offer.
However, that does not negate the fact that Kant himself said...
"...though we cannot know these objects as things in themselves, we must yet be in a position at least to think them as things in themselves; otherwise we should be landed in the absurd conclusion that there can be appearance without anything that appears..."
I also ran that by Copilot...
Me:
What did Kant mean by this:
"...though we cannot know these objects as things in themselves, we must yet be in a position at least to think them as things in themselves; otherwise we should be landed in the absurd conclusion that there can be appearance without anything that appears..."?
Copilot:
Kant’s statement touches on his distinction between “things in themselves” (noumena) and “appearances” (phenomena). Here’s a breakdown:
Things in Themselves (Noumena): These are objects as they exist independently of our perception. According to Kant, we cannot have direct knowledge of these objects because our understanding is limited to how things appear to us.
Appearances (Phenomena): These are the objects as we perceive them, shaped by our senses and cognitive faculties.
Kant argues that while we cannot know the true nature of things in themselves, we must still be able to think of them as existing. If we didn’t, it would imply that appearances (what we perceive) exist without anything real behind them, which he considers absurd.
Essentially, for there to be an appearance, there must be something that appears.
So, there you go, little V., Uncle Kant would consider your denial of the possible existence of noumena to be
"absurd."
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Sep 29, 2024 9:13 am
As a challenge,
prove that the apple-on-the-tree out there is an absolutely real mind-independent thing as an apple-in-itself?
seeds wrote: ↑Sun Sep 29, 2024 5:14 pm
I suggest that all material phenomena are dependent on mind in one way or another (including the apple-on-the-tree out there).
However, the same cannot be said of minds themselves.
In which case, I challenge you to prove that the existence of my mind is literally dependent on the existence of your mind.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Sep 29, 2024 9:13 am
Strawman.
I did not claim the existence of your mind is literally dependent on the existence of my mind.
Maybe not directly, but you have certainly implied it.
Okay then, does that mean that, at the very least, you will concede that our minds exist independent of one another? And that they are
"really-real," and not...
"...contingent upon a human-based collective-of-subject framework and system of emergence, realization and cognition of reality [FSERC] which is subsequently known and described..."
...?
_______