Kant's T_Idealism-Empirical_Realism vs Indirect Realism

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Veritas Aequitas
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Re: Kant's T_Idealism-Empirical_Realism vs Indirect Realism

Post by Veritas Aequitas »

Atla wrote: Fri Oct 11, 2024 2:36 pm
Veritas Aequitas wrote: Fri Oct 11, 2024 6:14 am Read the whole post.
So what other condemnations are you attributing to AI in downgrading Indirect Realism from the perspective of general rationality and intelligence.

Note, why you are so dogmatic in insisting your IR is realistic [when it is illusory] is due to some inherent psychological drive from an evolutionary default as a result of an existential crisis.
You need to resolve this issue psychologically rather than epistemologically.
AI didn't downgrade IR, you asked it to give you ideas to try to downgrade it. That's why it wrote
God wrote:Here’s how you can make the case that TI-ER is more realistic and rational:
It will try to argue for square circles too if you ask it to.

You haven't tried to actually counter my arguments so far (I highly doubt you can). Are you ready to forfeit the debate, can we agree that TI is shallow, self-deceptive and not realistic enough compared to IR?
What is wrong with your intelligence and rationality; all your arguments had been countered and I highlighted this in the above in summary;

Kant’s TI-ER is more rational and realistic than IR from a general perspective, not just within its own framework.

It is obvious from the above, Indirect Realism [IR] of a lower grade than TI-ER in terms of rationality and being realistic.
Veritas Aequitas
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Joined: Wed Jul 11, 2012 4:41 am

Re: Kant's T_Idealism-Empirical_Realism vs Indirect Realism

Post by Veritas Aequitas »

Atla wrote: Fri Oct 11, 2024 2:36 pm
And just for laughs:
Atla the KG wrote:From a general rational perspective, which one is more rational, transcendental idealism or indirect realism? Summary only.
God wrote:Transcendental idealism, proposed by Immanuel Kant, holds that our knowledge of the world is mediated by the mind’s structures, meaning that we only know things as they appear (phenomena), not as they are in themselves (noumena). Reality, according to this view, is shaped by the cognitive faculties that structure our experience.

Indirect realism, on the other hand, suggests that we perceive the world through mental representations or sense data, but that these representations correspond to an external reality that exists independently of the mind.

From a rational perspective, indirect realism is generally considered more straightforward because it preserves a mind-independent reality that can be causally connected to our perceptions. Transcendental idealism, while deeply philosophical and influential, complicates the relationship between perception and reality by asserting that the "true" nature of things is fundamentally unknowable.

Thus, indirect realism aligns more closely with commonsense reasoning and empirical science, whereas transcendental idealism delves into more speculative metaphysical territory.
Here is my question to ChatGpt about the inconsistency and ChatGpt's response.
My interlocutor presented the following from a chat [supposedly] wth ChatGpt - I presumed ChatGpt can refer to its own database to confirm this:

........................
[Interlocutor]
From a general rational perspective, which one is more rational, transcendental idealism or indirect realism? Summary only.

'ChatGpt:]Transcendental idealism, proposed by Immanuel Kant, holds that our knowledge of the world is mediated by the mind’s structures, meaning that we only know things as they appear (phenomena), not as they are in themselves (noumena). Reality, according to this view, is shaped by the cognitive faculties that structure our experience.

Indirect realism, on the other hand, suggests that we perceive the world through mental representations or sense data, but that these representations correspond to an external reality that exists independently of the mind.

From a rational perspective, indirect realism is generally considered more straightforward because it preserves a mind-independent reality that can be causally connected to our perceptions. Transcendental idealism, while deeply philosophical and influential, complicates the relationship between perception and reality by asserting that the "true" nature of things is fundamentally unknowable.

Thus, indirect realism aligns more closely with commonsense reasoning and empirical science, whereas transcendental idealism delves into more speculative metaphysical territory.
.............

However ChatGpt concluded the following with me:

[ChatGpt] Kant’s TI-ER is more rational and realistic than IR from a general perspective, not just within its own framework.

So which is the correct conclusion from ChatGpt?
I notice my interlocutor asked about Transcendental Idealism without the related empirical realism.

Here is ChatGpt's response to the inconsistency:
It seems your interlocutor's question and the way they framed the discussion led to the conclusion that Indirect Realism is "more straightforward" and aligns with common-sense reasoning, as it highlights a mind-independent reality in a causally connected manner. This conclusion likely reflects the perspective of common sense and empirical science, emphasizing perceptual realism and a straightforward connection between perception and the external world.

However, when you include Kant’s empirical realism (ER) alongside Transcendental Idealism (TI), the situation changes.
TI-ER, by acknowledging that we perceive a relatively mind-independent reality (phenomena) through the structures of our cognition, avoids the radical skepticism and epistemic uncertainty caused by the veil of perception in Indirect Realism.
This makes Kant's TI-ER more rational from the perspective of avoiding metaphysical speculation about an absolutely mind-independent noumenon (which is IR’s central problem) and by focusing on the experiential world that we can know.

Key Difference in Framing:
Your interlocutor’s question referred only to Transcendental Idealism (TI) without the empirical realism (ER) part of Kant’s theory. Without this, TI might seem more speculative and distant from common-sense realism.

When ER is included, as in Kant’s TI-ER, it bridges the gap between perception and reality by allowing for a knowable reality (phenomena) that’s structured by our cognition but still relatively mind-independent. This avoids the skepticism and reality-gap of Indirect Realism, making TI-ER more practical and rational in its approach to knowledge and perception.

Thus, both conclusions are contextually valid:

Without considering Kant’s ER, IR might seem more aligned with common-sense realism.

With Kant’s ER, TI-ER becomes a more rational and realistic view [than IR], especially in terms of avoiding speculative metaphysical problems associated with IR.


You could explain to your interlocutor that by considering TI-ER as a unified framework, we can better see how it addresses the problems inherent in IR while maintaining a pragmatic, rational understanding of reality.
So, ultimately,

"When ER is included, as in Kant’s TI-ER, it bridges the gap between perception and reality by allowing for a knowable reality (phenomena) that’s structured by our cognition but still relatively mind-independent.
This avoids the skepticism and reality-gap of Indirect Realism, making TI-ER more practical and rational [than IR] in its approach to knowledge and perception."

It seem you are that ignorant [cognitive deficient in this case] or deliberately omit the 'ER' element to deceive.
Atla
Posts: 9936
Joined: Fri Dec 15, 2017 8:27 am

Re: Kant's T_Idealism-Empirical_Realism vs Indirect Realism

Post by Atla »

Veritas Aequitas wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 2:35 am So, ultimately,

"When ER is included, as in Kant’s TI-ER, it bridges the gap between perception and reality by allowing for a knowable reality (phenomena) that’s structured by our cognition but still relatively mind-independent.
This avoids the skepticism and reality-gap of Indirect Realism, making TI-ER more practical and rational [than IR] in its approach to knowledge and perception."

It seem you are that ignorant [cognitive deficient in this case] or deliberately omit the 'ER' element to deceive.
I addressed this at the start: you aren't avoiding uncertainty about the external world by raising the uncertainty to 100%. You are making the uncertainty infinite.
Again: is IR too anti-realistic for you, VA? (Or rather ChatGPT, influenced by VA.) From the IR perspective, the above is exactly one of the main reasons why IR is the more rational one, it doesn't run away from the veil of perception problem. TI runs away from the problem by not actually running away from it, but by making it infinite, 100% impenetrable. There is only the veil for us, with nothing behind the veil for us, according to TI.

This doesn't match what we know about reality. And it employs a false sense of certainty, Kant is chasing and promoting an illusion of certainty. The intellectually honest approach, IR, accepts uncertainty, it accepts the veil of perception problem and what comes with it.
You are very ignorant, cognitively deficient and a stupid deceitful incompetent gnat, driven by the emotional impulses [fear] of an existential crisis, which is pathetic.
Atla the KG wrote:Is 100% uncertainty in respect to the world beyond phenomena inherent in Kant's philosophy? Summary only.
God wrote: Yes, in Kant's philosophy, 100% uncertainty about the world beyond phenomena (the "noumenal" world) is inherent. Kant argues that we can only know things as they appear to us (phenomena), through our sensory experiences and mental categories. The noumenal world, or "things-in-themselves" (the reality that exists independently of our perception), is inaccessible to human cognition. While we can speculate about its existence, we cannot have knowledge of it because our cognitive faculties are limited to processing phenomena. Therefore, uncertainty about the true nature of reality beyond our experiences is central to Kant's epistemology.
Veritas Aequitas
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Joined: Wed Jul 11, 2012 4:41 am

Re: Kant's T_Idealism-Empirical_Realism vs Indirect Realism

Post by Veritas Aequitas »

Atla wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 6:06 am
Veritas Aequitas wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 2:35 am So, ultimately,

"When ER is included, as in Kant’s TI-ER, it bridges the gap between perception and reality by allowing for a knowable reality (phenomena) that’s structured by our cognition but still relatively mind-independent.
This avoids the skepticism and reality-gap of Indirect Realism, making TI-ER more practical and rational [than IR] in its approach to knowledge and perception."

It seem you are that ignorant [cognitive deficient in this case] or deliberately omit the 'ER' element to deceive.
I addressed this at the start: you aren't avoiding uncertainty about the external world by raising the uncertainty to 100%. You are making the uncertainty infinite.
Again: is IR too anti-realistic for you, VA? (Or rather ChatGPT, influenced by VA.) From the IR perspective, the above is exactly one of the main reasons why IR is the more rational one, it doesn't run away from the veil of perception problem. TI runs away from the problem by not actually running away from it, but by making it infinite, 100% impenetrable. There is only the veil for us, with nothing behind the veil for us, according to TI.

This doesn't match what we know about reality. And it employs a false sense of certainty, Kant is chasing and promoting an illusion of certainty. The intellectually honest approach, IR, accepts uncertainty, it accepts the veil of perception problem and what comes with it.
You are very ignorant, cognitively deficient and a stupid deceitful incompetent gnat, driven by the emotional impulses [fear] of an existential crisis, which is pathetic.
Atla the KG wrote:Is 100% uncertainty in respect to the world beyond phenomena inherent in Kant's philosophy? Summary only.
God wrote: Yes, in Kant's philosophy, 100% uncertainty about the world beyond phenomena (the "noumenal" world) is inherent. Kant argues that we can only know things as they appear to us (phenomena), through our sensory experiences and mental categories. The noumenal world, or "things-in-themselves" (the reality that exists independently of our perception), is inaccessible to human cognition. While we can speculate about its existence, we cannot have knowledge of it because our cognitive faculties are limited to processing phenomena. Therefore, uncertainty about the true nature of reality beyond our experiences is central to Kant's epistemology.
You are the philosophical gnat and is being very deceptive by not providing ChatGpt with the full context.
VA to ChatGpt wrote:My interlocutor is a discussion of Indirect Realism [IR] vs TI-ER presented the following from ChatGpt:

[Interlocutor to ChatGpt] Is 100% uncertainty in respect to the world beyond phenomena inherent in Kant's philosophy? Summary only.
[ChatGpt wrote:]
"Yes, in Kant's philosophy, 100% uncertainty about the world beyond phenomena (the "noumenal" world) is inherent. Kant argues that we can only know things as they appear to us (phenomena), through our sensory experiences and mental categories. The noumenal world, or "things-in-themselves" (the reality that exists independently of our perception), is inaccessible to human cognition. While we can speculate about its existence, we cannot have knowledge of it because our cognitive faculties are limited to processing phenomena. Therefore, uncertainty about the true nature of reality beyond our experiences is central to Kant's epistemology."
I believe there are nuances to the above.
Kant's TI-ER does not acknowledge the existence of any real constitutive world beyond the phenomena. TI-ER merely postulate a regulative world beyond the phenomena.
As such there is no question of certain or uncertainty about any constitutive world beyond the phenomena which IR is claiming to exists as real.
Here's ChatGpt's Reply:
"You could explain to your interlocutor that Kant's TI-ER does not entail 100% uncertainty about a constitutive world beyond phenomena, because such a world is not affirmed by Kant in the constitutive sense that IR presumes."
ChatGpt wrote:You are correct in noting that there are nuances in Kant's Transcendental Idealism and Empirical Realism (TI-ER) that are missing from the explanation provided.
The 100% uncertainty about a constitutive noumenal world presented by your interlocutor oversimplifies Kant’s position and might reflect an Indirect Realist assumption that there is a constitutive world beyond phenomena.
However, Kant's TI-ER does not support this assumption.

Here’s a more nuanced view:

Kant’s Position on the Noumenal World:
Kant does not affirm the existence of a constitutive noumenal world that is absolutely mind-independent. The noumenon (or thing-in-itself) is not a real object that exists beyond our cognition in any constitutive way. Instead, it is a regulative idea—a concept we can think about but not know.
Kant emphasizes that the noumenon is not something we are uncertain about as an object that exists beyond phenomena because it is not part of empirical reality in the first place. The noumenon is used only as a boundary concept to remind us that our knowledge is limited to phenomena, not to affirm that there’s something real beyond phenomena that we are simply unable to reach.

Difference Between IR and TI-ER:
Indirect Realism (IR) presumes there is an absolutely mind-independent reality (the noumenon) beyond phenomena, which we perceive indirectly through mental representations (sense data). According to IR, there’s uncertainty because we can never directly access this constitutive external reality (noumenon).

Kant’s TI-ER, on the other hand, does not posit a constitutive noumenal world that causes our perceptions. Instead, Kant’s empirical realism holds that what is real for us is what we can experience through the categories of understanding—i.e., the phenomena. The noumenon remains a regulative concept, not something we speculate about as truly existing in a constitutive sense.

Key Point: No “Uncertainty” About Noumenon in Kant’s TI-ER
Since Kant does not affirm a constitutive noumenon, there is no question of certainty or uncertainty about its existence.
TI-ER avoids the veil of perception problem inherent in IR by not positing a separate realm of unknowable things as constitutively real. Instead, what is real for us is what appears within the framework of our empirical knowledge (the phenomena).

Response to Your Interlocutor:
You could explain to your interlocutor that Kant's TI-ER does not entail 100% uncertainty about a constitutive world beyond phenomena, because such a world is not affirmed by Kant in the constitutive sense that IR presumes. Instead, the noumenon is regulative, guiding our understanding of the limits of knowledge, not something real that lies behind a veil of perception, as IR claims.

In summary:
TI-ER avoids the veil of perception issue because it doesn’t assume the constitutive existence of a mind-independent noumenon.
The noumenon is a regulative idea, not something real that we are uncertain about.
IR, in contrast, insists on the existence of a constitutive noumenal world, leading to the problem of uncertainty and the reality-gap (veil of perception).
Did you notice, so far in trying to search for holes to eel out, it is always a dead end for you.
The more you try to eel out you are merely exposing your ignorance and deceptive nature.
Meanwhile it is a good refresher for me to reinforce what I have learned so far.
Last edited by Veritas Aequitas on Sat Oct 12, 2024 6:33 am, edited 1 time in total.
Atla
Posts: 9936
Joined: Fri Dec 15, 2017 8:27 am

Re: Kant's T_Idealism-Empirical_Realism vs Indirect Realism

Post by Atla »

Veritas Aequitas wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 6:25 am
Atla wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 6:06 am
Veritas Aequitas wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 2:35 am So, ultimately,

"When ER is included, as in Kant’s TI-ER, it bridges the gap between perception and reality by allowing for a knowable reality (phenomena) that’s structured by our cognition but still relatively mind-independent.
This avoids the skepticism and reality-gap of Indirect Realism, making TI-ER more practical and rational [than IR] in its approach to knowledge and perception."

It seem you are that ignorant [cognitive deficient in this case] or deliberately omit the 'ER' element to deceive.
I addressed this at the start: you aren't avoiding uncertainty about the external world by raising the uncertainty to 100%. You are making the uncertainty infinite.
Again: is IR too anti-realistic for you, VA? (Or rather ChatGPT, influenced by VA.) From the IR perspective, the above is exactly one of the main reasons why IR is the more rational one, it doesn't run away from the veil of perception problem. TI runs away from the problem by not actually running away from it, but by making it infinite, 100% impenetrable. There is only the veil for us, with nothing behind the veil for us, according to TI.

This doesn't match what we know about reality. And it employs a false sense of certainty, Kant is chasing and promoting an illusion of certainty. The intellectually honest approach, IR, accepts uncertainty, it accepts the veil of perception problem and what comes with it.
You are very ignorant, cognitively deficient and a stupid deceitful incompetent gnat, driven by the emotional impulses [fear] of an existential crisis, which is pathetic.
Atla the KG wrote:Is 100% uncertainty in respect to the world beyond phenomena inherent in Kant's philosophy? Summary only.
God wrote: Yes, in Kant's philosophy, 100% uncertainty about the world beyond phenomena (the "noumenal" world) is inherent. Kant argues that we can only know things as they appear to us (phenomena), through our sensory experiences and mental categories. The noumenal world, or "things-in-themselves" (the reality that exists independently of our perception), is inaccessible to human cognition. While we can speculate about its existence, we cannot have knowledge of it because our cognitive faculties are limited to processing phenomena. Therefore, uncertainty about the true nature of reality beyond our experiences is central to Kant's epistemology.
You are the philosophical gnat and is being very deceptive by not providing ChatGpt with the full context.
VA to ChatGpt wrote:My interlocutor is a discussion of Indirect Realism [IR] vs TI-ER presented the following from ChatGpt:

[Interlocutor to ChatGpt] Is 100% uncertainty in respect to the world beyond phenomena inherent in Kant's philosophy? Summary only.
[ChatGpt wrote:]
"Yes, in Kant's philosophy, 100% uncertainty about the world beyond phenomena (the "noumenal" world) is inherent. Kant argues that we can only know things as they appear to us (phenomena), through our sensory experiences and mental categories. The noumenal world, or "things-in-themselves" (the reality that exists independently of our perception), is inaccessible to human cognition. While we can speculate about its existence, we cannot have knowledge of it because our cognitive faculties are limited to processing phenomena. Therefore, uncertainty about the true nature of reality beyond our experiences is central to Kant's epistemology."
I believe there are nuances to the above.
Kant's TI-ER does not acknowledge the existence of any real constitutive world beyond the phenomena. TI-ER merely postulate a regulative world beyond the phenomena.
As such there is no question of certain or uncertainty about any constitutive world beyond the phenomena which IR is claiming to exists as real.
Here's ChatGpt's Reply:
"You could explain to your interlocutor that Kant's TI-ER does not entail 100% uncertainty about a constitutive world beyond phenomena, because such a world is not affirmed by Kant in the constitutive sense that IR presumes."
ChatGpt wrote:You are correct in noting that there are nuances in Kant's Transcendental Idealism and Empirical Realism (TI-ER) that are missing from the explanation provided.
The 100% uncertainty about a constitutive noumenal world presented by your interlocutor oversimplifies Kant’s position and might reflect an Indirect Realist assumption that there is a constitutive world beyond phenomena.
However, Kant's TI-ER does not support this assumption.

Here’s a more nuanced view:

Kant’s Position on the Noumenal World:
Kant does not affirm the existence of a constitutive noumenal world that is absolutely mind-independent. The noumenon (or thing-in-itself) is not a real object that exists beyond our cognition in any constitutive way. Instead, it is a regulative idea—a concept we can think about but not know.
Kant emphasizes that the noumenon is not something we are uncertain about as an object that exists beyond phenomena because it is not part of empirical reality in the first place. The noumenon is used only as a boundary concept to remind us that our knowledge is limited to phenomena, not to affirm that there’s something real beyond phenomena that we are simply unable to reach.

Difference Between IR and TI-ER:
Indirect Realism (IR) presumes there is an absolutely mind-independent reality (the noumenon) beyond phenomena, which we perceive indirectly through mental representations (sense data). According to IR, there’s uncertainty because we can never directly access this constitutive external reality (noumenon).

Kant’s TI-ER, on the other hand, does not posit a constitutive noumenal world that causes our perceptions. Instead, Kant’s empirical realism holds that what is real for us is what we can experience through the categories of understanding—i.e., the phenomena. The noumenon remains a regulative concept, not something we speculate about as truly existing in a constitutive sense.

Key Point: No “Uncertainty” About Noumenon in Kant’s TI-ER
Since Kant does not affirm a constitutive noumenon, there is no question of certainty or uncertainty about its existence.
TI-ER avoids the veil of perception problem inherent in IR by not positing a separate realm of unknowable things as constitutively real. Instead, what is real for us is what appears within the framework of our empirical knowledge (the phenomena).

Response to Your Interlocutor:
You could explain to your interlocutor that Kant's TI-ER does not entail 100% uncertainty about a constitutive world beyond phenomena, because such a world is not affirmed by Kant in the constitutive sense that IR presumes. Instead, the noumenon is regulative, guiding our understanding of the limits of knowledge, not something real that lies behind a veil of perception, as IR claims.

In summary:
TI-ER avoids the veil of perception issue because it doesn’t assume the constitutive existence of a mind-independent noumenon.
The noumenon is a regulative idea, not something real that we are uncertain about.
IR, in contrast, insists on the existence of a constitutive noumenal world, leading to the problem of uncertainty and the reality-gap (veil of perception).
You are far too stupid to understand anything here. OF COURSE such a world is not affirmed by Kant in the constitutive sense, that's what I said. But:
TI-ER merely postulate a regulative world beyond the phenomena.
The whole problem of TI-ER is that whatever you postulate beyond the phenomena, is just 100% your random imagination. That's solipsism of a dumb kind. What regulative world?
Veritas Aequitas
Posts: 15722
Joined: Wed Jul 11, 2012 4:41 am

Re: Kant's T_Idealism-Empirical_Realism vs Indirect Realism

Post by Veritas Aequitas »

Atla wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 6:32 am You are far too stupid to understand anything here. OF COURSE such a world is not affirmed by Kant in the constitutive sense, that's what I said. But:
How can you understand 'constitutive' as above, if you do not understand what is regulative as per your question below;
TI-ER merely postulate a regulative world beyond the phenomena.
The whole problem of TI-ER is that whatever you postulate beyond the phenomena, is just 100% your random imagination. That's solipsism of a dumb kind. What regulative world?
AI had already explained in its answer.
It is evident from this that you have not read AI response to me thoroughly.
If not sure ask AI to give you a tutorial on it [surely better than me], i.e. constitutive as in IR versus regulative as in TI-ER.
Also ask AI whether regulative lead to solipsism.
Atla
Posts: 9936
Joined: Fri Dec 15, 2017 8:27 am

Re: Kant's T_Idealism-Empirical_Realism vs Indirect Realism

Post by Atla »

Veritas Aequitas wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 6:38 am
Atla wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 6:32 am You are far too stupid to understand anything here. OF COURSE such a world is not affirmed by Kant in the constitutive sense, that's what I said. But:
How can you understand 'constitutive' as above, if you do not understand what is regulative as per your question below;
TI-ER merely postulate a regulative world beyond the phenomena.
The whole problem of TI-ER is that whatever you postulate beyond the phenomena, is just 100% your random imagination. That's solipsism of a dumb kind. What regulative world?
AI had already explained in its answer.
It is evident from this that you have not read AI response to me thoroughly.
If not sure ask AI to give you a tutorial on it [surely better than me], i.e. constitutive as in IR versus regulative as in TI-ER.
Also ask AI whether regulative lead to solipsism.
AI said regulative idea, not regulative world - not sure where you got that from. The regulative idea brings us back to the main point:
From the IR perspective, the above is exactly one of the main reasons why IR is the more rational one, it doesn't run away from the veil of perception problem. TI runs away from the problem by not actually running away from it, but by making it infinite, 100% impenetrable. There is only the veil for us, with nothing behind the veil for us, according to TI.

This doesn't match what we know about reality. And it employs a false sense of certainty, Kant is chasing and promoting an illusion of certainty. The intellectually honest approach, IR, accepts uncertainty, it accepts the veil of perception problem and what comes with it.
Hence IR is calling TI's bluff, lie. You can lie to yourself like Kant did, but we can do better. When only your phenomena exist then there is only one mind in existence for you, which is a dumb solipsism. And it can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions either. This is NOT more rational than IR.
Veritas Aequitas
Posts: 15722
Joined: Wed Jul 11, 2012 4:41 am

Re: Kant's T_Idealism-Empirical_Realism vs Indirect Realism

Post by Veritas Aequitas »

Atla wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 6:48 am
Veritas Aequitas wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 6:38 am
Atla wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 6:32 am You are far too stupid to understand anything here. OF COURSE such a world is not affirmed by Kant in the constitutive sense, that's what I said. But:
How can you understand 'constitutive' as above, if you do not understand what is regulative as per your question below;

The whole problem of TI-ER is that whatever you postulate beyond the phenomena, is just 100% your random imagination. That's solipsism of a dumb kind. What regulative world?
AI had already explained in its answer.
It is evident from this that you have not read AI response to me thoroughly.
If not sure ask AI to give you a tutorial on it [surely better than me], i.e. constitutive as in IR versus regulative as in TI-ER.
Also ask AI whether regulative lead to solipsism.
AI said regulative idea, not regulative world - not sure where you got that from. The regulative idea brings us back to the main point:
From the IR perspective, the above is exactly one of the main reasons why IR is the more rational one, it doesn't run away from the veil of perception problem. TI runs away from the problem by not actually running away from it, but by making it infinite, 100% impenetrable. There is only the veil for us, with nothing behind the veil for us, according to TI.

This doesn't match what we know about reality. And it employs a false sense of certainty, Kant is chasing and promoting an illusion of certainty. The intellectually honest approach, IR, accepts uncertainty, it accepts the veil of perception problem and what comes with it.
Hence IR is calling TI's bluff, lie. You can lie to yourself like Kant did, but we can do better. When only your phenomena exist then there is only one mind in existence for you, which is a dumb solipsism. And it can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions either. This is NOT more rational than IR.
AI had already justified based on arguments and countering the above points:
ChatGpt wrote:Conclusion
Kant’s TI-ER is more rational and realistic than IR from a general perspective, not just within its own framework.
viewtopic.php?p=734432#p734432
I suggest you read that thread again thoroughly and provide your counters against AI's justifications.

As I had stated, you are driven psychologically by an evolutionary default to dogmatically stick to your beliefs despite the valid justifications against your beliefs.
Atla
Posts: 9936
Joined: Fri Dec 15, 2017 8:27 am

Re: Kant's T_Idealism-Empirical_Realism vs Indirect Realism

Post by Atla »

Veritas Aequitas wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 7:25 am AI had already justified based on arguments and countering the above points:
ChatGpt wrote:Conclusion
Kant’s TI-ER is more rational and realistic than IR from a general perspective, not just within its own framework.
viewtopic.php?p=734432#p734432
I suggest you read that thread again thoroughly and provide your counters against AI's justifications.

As I had stated, you are driven psychologically by an evolutionary default to dogmatically stick to your beliefs despite the valid justifications against your beliefs.
I've already debunked these weak arguments long ago. But since you are a motherfucking idiot, I'll repeat them:
1. TI-ER's Practical Approach to Reality
Kant’s TI-ER offers a practical framework for understanding reality by acknowledging that our experience of the world is shaped by the cognitive structures (space, time, categories) that we impose on perceptions. Reality, as it appears to us, is real within this framework. This approach avoids unnecessary metaphysical speculation about an unknowable external world.

By contrast, IR insists on the existence of an absolutely mind-independent world (noumenon) that we cannot directly access, which introduces a reality-gap. This creates uncertainty and skepticism about whether our perceptions align with the external world. From a rational perspective, the burden of proof lies on IR to explain why positing such an unreachable reality is more reasonable.
Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.
2. IR’s Metaphysical Speculation is Less Rational
Indirect Realism relies on the metaphysical assumption that there is a noumenon—a world entirely independent of our minds—that our perceptions represent indirectly. However, this assumption cannot be proven or directly experienced. It remains a speculative hypothesis that creates an epistemic problem: how do we know our representations reflect this world accurately?

TI-ER, on the other hand, is grounded in the reality we experience. It avoids metaphysical speculation by focusing on how reality appears to us and the conditions that make knowledge possible. Phenomena are real for us, and knowledge is possible because we engage with this structured reality. There is no need to posit an unreachable mind-independent world beyond our experience.
Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.
3. IR’s Vulnerability to Radical Skepticism
IR’s reality-gap (veil of perception) introduces radical skepticism because it posits that our access to reality is always indirect. This leaves us questioning whether our perceptions truly correspond to the mind-independent external world. From a rational perspective, this skeptical vulnerability weakens IR’s claim to being the more “realistic” theory.

Kant’s TI-ER avoids this issue by recognizing that we can know the world as it appears to us (phenomena). The noumenon, in Kant’s view, serves as a regulative idea, helping us understand the limits of our knowledge but not as a hidden reality we’re failing to access. This approach is more reasonable because it doesn’t require us to doubt the reality of what we experience.
Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.
4. TI-ER is More Aligned with Scientific Practice
Modern science operates within a framework similar to TI-ER: we construct theoretical models of reality based on empirical data, acknowledging that we may never know the world in itself but that our models are sufficiently accurate for practical purposes. This scientific mindset aligns more with Kant’s empirical realism than with IR, which posits a reality beyond our perception that science cannot directly engage with.

From a general rational perspective, TI-ER is more compatible with how we actually engage with reality in everyday life and in science. It provides a workable framework for knowledge without introducing speculative, inaccessible entities like the IR’s noumenon.
This a blatant lie, IR and not TI-ER is the default in science exactly because it's consistent with IR.
5. Reality-Gap vs. No Reality-Gap
IR is often described as more honest because it “accepts uncertainty.” However, the reality-gap it creates by insisting on a mind-independent noumenon leads to more epistemic uncertainty than is necessary. It leaves us with the problem of never knowing whether we have accurate knowledge of the external world.

TI-ER, by focusing on what we can know (phenomena) and rejecting the idea of a constitutive noumenon, avoids this reality-gap entirely. What is real for us is what appears through the structures of our cognition. This is a more rational and practical view of reality, as it doesn’t lead to the skepticism that arises from the gap introduced by IR.
Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. There is no problem with the external world because there is no external world at all. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.

You mentally ill, solipsistic piece of shit. You give up your humanity willingly, which is of course evil. And evil gets the treatment it deserves.
Veritas Aequitas
Posts: 15722
Joined: Wed Jul 11, 2012 4:41 am

Re: Kant's T_Idealism-Empirical_Realism vs Indirect Realism

Post by Veritas Aequitas »

Atla wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 7:44 am
Veritas Aequitas wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 7:25 am AI had already justified based on arguments and countering the above points:
ChatGpt wrote:Conclusion
Kant’s TI-ER is more rational and realistic than IR from a general perspective, not just within its own framework.
viewtopic.php?p=734432#p734432
I suggest you read that thread again thoroughly and provide your counters against AI's justifications.

As I had stated, you are driven psychologically by an evolutionary default to dogmatically stick to your beliefs despite the valid justifications against your beliefs.
I've already debunked these weak arguments long ago. But since you are a motherfucking idiot, I'll repeat them:
1. TI-ER's Practical Approach to Reality
Kant’s TI-ER offers a practical framework for understanding reality by acknowledging that our experience of the world is shaped by the cognitive structures (space, time, categories) that we impose on perceptions. Reality, as it appears to us, is real within this framework. This approach avoids unnecessary metaphysical speculation about an unknowable external world.

By contrast, IR insists on the existence of an absolutely mind-independent world (noumenon) that we cannot directly access, which introduces a reality-gap. This creates uncertainty and skepticism about whether our perceptions align with the external world. From a rational perspective, the burden of proof lies on IR to explain why positing such an unreachable reality is more reasonable.
Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.
2. IR’s Metaphysical Speculation is Less Rational
Indirect Realism relies on the metaphysical assumption that there is a noumenon—a world entirely independent of our minds—that our perceptions represent indirectly. However, this assumption cannot be proven or directly experienced. It remains a speculative hypothesis that creates an epistemic problem: how do we know our representations reflect this world accurately?

TI-ER, on the other hand, is grounded in the reality we experience. It avoids metaphysical speculation by focusing on how reality appears to us and the conditions that make knowledge possible. Phenomena are real for us, and knowledge is possible because we engage with this structured reality. There is no need to posit an unreachable mind-independent world beyond our experience.
Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.
3. IR’s Vulnerability to Radical Skepticism
IR’s reality-gap (veil of perception) introduces radical skepticism because it posits that our access to reality is always indirect. This leaves us questioning whether our perceptions truly correspond to the mind-independent external world. From a rational perspective, this skeptical vulnerability weakens IR’s claim to being the more “realistic” theory.

Kant’s TI-ER avoids this issue by recognizing that we can know the world as it appears to us (phenomena). The noumenon, in Kant’s view, serves as a regulative idea, helping us understand the limits of our knowledge but not as a hidden reality we’re failing to access. This approach is more reasonable because it doesn’t require us to doubt the reality of what we experience.
Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.
4. TI-ER is More Aligned with Scientific Practice
Modern science operates within a framework similar to TI-ER: we construct theoretical models of reality based on empirical data, acknowledging that we may never know the world in itself but that our models are sufficiently accurate for practical purposes. This scientific mindset aligns more with Kant’s empirical realism than with IR, which posits a reality beyond our perception that science cannot directly engage with.

From a general rational perspective, TI-ER is more compatible with how we actually engage with reality in everyday life and in science. It provides a workable framework for knowledge without introducing speculative, inaccessible entities like the IR’s noumenon.
This a blatant lie, IR and not TI-ER is the default in science exactly because it's consistent with IR.
5. Reality-Gap vs. No Reality-Gap
IR is often described as more honest because it “accepts uncertainty.” However, the reality-gap it creates by insisting on a mind-independent noumenon leads to more epistemic uncertainty than is necessary. It leaves us with the problem of never knowing whether we have accurate knowledge of the external world.

TI-ER, by focusing on what we can know (phenomena) and rejecting the idea of a constitutive noumenon, avoids this reality-gap entirely. What is real for us is what appears through the structures of our cognition. This is a more rational and practical view of reality, as it doesn’t lead to the skepticism that arises from the gap introduced by IR.
Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. There is no problem with the external world because there is no external world at all. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.

You mentally ill, solipsistic piece of shit. You give up your humanity willingly, which is of course evil. And evil gets the treatment it deserves.
Nope you have not responded to the above until now.

That you are resorting to MF vulgarities is exposing your losing grip on the argument.
I suggest you avoid the vulgarities to prevent a tit-for-tat, or you want it to compound so that it enable you an escape route? If you continue with vulgarities you risk getting banned.

I will respond to your counters re point 1-5 later.
Atla
Posts: 9936
Joined: Fri Dec 15, 2017 8:27 am

Re: Kant's T_Idealism-Empirical_Realism vs Indirect Realism

Post by Atla »

Veritas Aequitas wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 8:09 am
Atla wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 7:44 am
Veritas Aequitas wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 7:25 am AI had already justified based on arguments and countering the above points:



I suggest you read that thread again thoroughly and provide your counters against AI's justifications.

As I had stated, you are driven psychologically by an evolutionary default to dogmatically stick to your beliefs despite the valid justifications against your beliefs.
I've already debunked these weak arguments long ago. But since you are a motherfucking idiot, I'll repeat them:
1. TI-ER's Practical Approach to Reality
Kant’s TI-ER offers a practical framework for understanding reality by acknowledging that our experience of the world is shaped by the cognitive structures (space, time, categories) that we impose on perceptions. Reality, as it appears to us, is real within this framework. This approach avoids unnecessary metaphysical speculation about an unknowable external world.

By contrast, IR insists on the existence of an absolutely mind-independent world (noumenon) that we cannot directly access, which introduces a reality-gap. This creates uncertainty and skepticism about whether our perceptions align with the external world. From a rational perspective, the burden of proof lies on IR to explain why positing such an unreachable reality is more reasonable.
Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.
2. IR’s Metaphysical Speculation is Less Rational
Indirect Realism relies on the metaphysical assumption that there is a noumenon—a world entirely independent of our minds—that our perceptions represent indirectly. However, this assumption cannot be proven or directly experienced. It remains a speculative hypothesis that creates an epistemic problem: how do we know our representations reflect this world accurately?

TI-ER, on the other hand, is grounded in the reality we experience. It avoids metaphysical speculation by focusing on how reality appears to us and the conditions that make knowledge possible. Phenomena are real for us, and knowledge is possible because we engage with this structured reality. There is no need to posit an unreachable mind-independent world beyond our experience.
Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.
3. IR’s Vulnerability to Radical Skepticism
IR’s reality-gap (veil of perception) introduces radical skepticism because it posits that our access to reality is always indirect. This leaves us questioning whether our perceptions truly correspond to the mind-independent external world. From a rational perspective, this skeptical vulnerability weakens IR’s claim to being the more “realistic” theory.

Kant’s TI-ER avoids this issue by recognizing that we can know the world as it appears to us (phenomena). The noumenon, in Kant’s view, serves as a regulative idea, helping us understand the limits of our knowledge but not as a hidden reality we’re failing to access. This approach is more reasonable because it doesn’t require us to doubt the reality of what we experience.
Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.
4. TI-ER is More Aligned with Scientific Practice
Modern science operates within a framework similar to TI-ER: we construct theoretical models of reality based on empirical data, acknowledging that we may never know the world in itself but that our models are sufficiently accurate for practical purposes. This scientific mindset aligns more with Kant’s empirical realism than with IR, which posits a reality beyond our perception that science cannot directly engage with.

From a general rational perspective, TI-ER is more compatible with how we actually engage with reality in everyday life and in science. It provides a workable framework for knowledge without introducing speculative, inaccessible entities like the IR’s noumenon.
This a blatant lie, IR and not TI-ER is the default in science exactly because it's consistent with IR.
5. Reality-Gap vs. No Reality-Gap
IR is often described as more honest because it “accepts uncertainty.” However, the reality-gap it creates by insisting on a mind-independent noumenon leads to more epistemic uncertainty than is necessary. It leaves us with the problem of never knowing whether we have accurate knowledge of the external world.

TI-ER, by focusing on what we can know (phenomena) and rejecting the idea of a constitutive noumenon, avoids this reality-gap entirely. What is real for us is what appears through the structures of our cognition. This is a more rational and practical view of reality, as it doesn’t lead to the skepticism that arises from the gap introduced by IR.
Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. There is no problem with the external world because there is no external world at all. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.

You mentally ill, solipsistic piece of shit. You give up your humanity willingly, which is of course evil. And evil gets the treatment it deserves.
Nope you have not responded to the above until now.

That you are resorting to MF vulgarities is exposing your losing grip on the argument.
I suggest you avoid the vulgarities to prevent a tit-for-tat, or you want it to compound so that it enable you an escape route? If you continue with vulgarities you risk getting banned.

I will respond to your counters re point 1-5 later.
I already addressed the above many times. You are far too incompetent to ever participate in a philosophical debate. Why are you here? Philosophy is not for the 90 IQ people.
Veritas Aequitas
Posts: 15722
Joined: Wed Jul 11, 2012 4:41 am

Re: Kant's T_Idealism-Empirical_Realism vs Indirect Realism

Post by Veritas Aequitas »

Atla wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 8:13 am I already addressed the above many times. You are far too incompetent to ever participate in a philosophical debate. Why are you here? Philosophy is not for the 90 IQ people.
Nope, yours is merely a wishful thinking that you have responded to my points but actually you have not done so effectively. It is like a game of tennis where your missed my 140 mph serves!! but imagined and insist you have returned my serves to within my side of the court.

Here is AI counter to your response to point 1-5:
VA to AI wrote:From your response that
[ChatGpt]"Conclusion
Kant’s TI-ER is more rational and realistic than IR from a general perspective, not just within its own framework"
as supported by the following justifications [1-5], my interlocutor responded as below:

[ChatGpt] 1. TI-ER's Practical Approach to Reality
Kant’s TI-ER offers a practical framework for understanding reality by acknowledging that our experience of the world is shaped by the cognitive structures (space, time, categories) that we impose on perceptions. Reality, as it appears to us, is real within this framework. This approach avoids unnecessary metaphysical speculation about an unknowable external world.

By contrast, IR insists on the existence of an absolutely mind-independent world (noumenon) that we cannot directly access, which introduces a reality-gap. This creates uncertainty and skepticism about whether our perceptions align with the external world. From a rational perspective, the burden of proof lies on IR to explain why positing such an unreachable reality is more reasonable.

[Interlocutor Responded]]Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.

[ChatGpt] 2. IR’s Metaphysical Speculation is Less Rational
Indirect Realism relies on the metaphysical assumption that there is a noumenon—a world entirely independent of our minds—that our perceptions represent indirectly. However, this assumption cannot be proven or directly experienced. It remains a speculative hypothesis that creates an epistemic problem: how do we know our representations reflect this world accurately?

TI-ER, on the other hand, is grounded in the reality we experience. It avoids metaphysical speculation by focusing on how reality appears to us and the conditions that make knowledge possible. Phenomena are real for us, and knowledge is possible because we engage with this structured reality. There is no need to posit an unreachable mind-independent world beyond our experience.

[Interlocutor responded]Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.

[ChatGpt]3. IR’s Vulnerability to Radical Skepticism
IR’s reality-gap (veil of perception) introduces radical skepticism because it posits that our access to reality is always indirect. This leaves us questioning whether our perceptions truly correspond to the mind-independent external world. From a rational perspective, this skeptical vulnerability weakens IR’s claim to being the more “realistic” theory.

Kant’s TI-ER avoids this issue by recognizing that we can know the world as it appears to us (phenomena). The noumenon, in Kant’s view, serves as a regulative idea, helping us understand the limits of our knowledge but not as a hidden reality we’re failing to access. This approach is more reasonable because it doesn’t require us to doubt the reality of what we experience.

[Interlocutor Responded] Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.

[Me]I don't believe TI-ER leads to solipsism since ER acknowledge the real empirical self, selves those of others and the empirical external world relatively.
TI-ER can justify the existence of hallucinations and illusions via the scientific and psychological framework and system.

How would you counter the interlocutor's response to the above?
Note: I will post his response to point 4 & 5 later.
Here is ChatGpt's response:

ChatGpt Wrote:
Your interlocutor's repeated accusation that Kant's Transcendental Idealism (TI-ER) leads to solipsism overlooks important aspects of Kant's philosophy.
TI-ER is not solipsistic because Kant distinguishes between the empirical world (which includes other selves, external objects, and shared experiences) and the noumenal realm (which we can’t know directly).
In fact, Kant’s empirical realism strongly affirms the reality of the world we experience through the categories of the mind.
Let’s break down the main counterpoints:

1. TI-ER Does Not Lead to Solipsism
Solipsism is the belief that only one’s own mind is certain to exist. However, Kant’s TI-ER does not deny the existence of the external world, other people, or objective reality. Instead, Kant's framework maintains that while we cannot know the thing-in-itself (noumenon), we can know the world of phenomena, which includes other selves and objects we interact with.

Kant’s empirical realism claims that the world we perceive (the empirical world) is real for us and shared by others. So, empirical selves and empirical objects are real within this framework, and they are not reducible to a solitary mind. Solipsism is fundamentally different because it denies any external reality except the individual’s mind, whereas Kant affirms that we experience a shared, structured reality.

2. TI-ER Can Account for Hallucinations and Illusions
Hallucinations and illusions can be explained within Kant's framework. They occur when our cognitive faculties or sensory apparatus malfunction or are deceived, leading us to misinterpret phenomena. Importantly, hallucinations and illusions are empirical phenomena; they are real experiences within our perceptual framework, even though they do not correspond to objective reality.

From the scientific and psychological perspectives, hallucinations are studied as distortions of perception. Kant's TI-ER doesn’t deny that such experiences occur; instead, it provides a foundation for how our minds organize sensory data and why, sometimes, this process can be flawed. Illusions and hallucinations are treated as exceptions within the broader structure of how we perceive and interact with the world.

3. Why TI-ER is More Rational and Avoids the Problem of Radical Skepticism
Your interlocutor's insistence that IR is more realistic because it "accepts" uncertainty (in relation to the veil of perception) is misguided.
While IR maintains a reality-gap, creating radical skepticism about whether our perceptions accurately reflect an external world, TI-ER avoids this pitfall by affirming the reality of phenomena and treating the noumenon as a regulative idea.

In contrast, IR’s metaphysical assumption of an absolutely mind-independent noumenon introduces unnecessary epistemic uncertainty (the veil of perception), as there is no direct access to this mind-independent world. From a rational perspective, positing an unreachable reality while claiming it’s real without proof is less justified than Kant’s TI-ER, which grounds reality in experience.

4. TI-ER Affirms the Shared Reality of Others
Empirical Realism (ER) in Kant’s system acknowledges the existence of others and an empirical external world. The fact that we interact with other people and shared objects underlines the reality of these experiences, even if they are shaped by our cognitive faculties. This distinction ensures that TI-ER does not collapse into solipsism, since it affirms the inter-subjective nature of reality.

Conclusion:
Your interlocutor’s response that TI-ER leads to solipsism and cannot explain hallucinations or illusions is incorrect.
Kant's framework, through empirical realism, acknowledges the reality of other selves and the external world, while hallucinations and illusions are addressed as exceptions within the broader functioning of our cognitive system.

Additionally, TI-ER is more rational than IR because it avoids the reality-gap and radical skepticism introduced by positing an absolutely unknowable noumenon that IR cannot prove or directly justify.
...................

I suggest you read the above responses thoroughly.
Atla
Posts: 9936
Joined: Fri Dec 15, 2017 8:27 am

Re: Kant's T_Idealism-Empirical_Realism vs Indirect Realism

Post by Atla »

Veritas Aequitas wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 8:38 am
Atla wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 8:13 am I already addressed the above many times. You are far too incompetent to ever participate in a philosophical debate. Why are you here? Philosophy is not for the 90 IQ people.
Nope, yours is merely a wishful thinking that you have responded to my points but actually you have not done so effectively. It is like a game of tennis where your missed my 140 mph serves!! but imagined and insist you have returned my serves to within my side of the court.

Here is AI counter to your response to point 1-5:
VA to AI wrote:From your response that
[ChatGpt]"Conclusion
Kant’s TI-ER is more rational and realistic than IR from a general perspective, not just within its own framework"
as supported by the following justifications [1-5], my interlocutor responded as below:

[ChatGpt] 1. TI-ER's Practical Approach to Reality
Kant’s TI-ER offers a practical framework for understanding reality by acknowledging that our experience of the world is shaped by the cognitive structures (space, time, categories) that we impose on perceptions. Reality, as it appears to us, is real within this framework. This approach avoids unnecessary metaphysical speculation about an unknowable external world.

By contrast, IR insists on the existence of an absolutely mind-independent world (noumenon) that we cannot directly access, which introduces a reality-gap. This creates uncertainty and skepticism about whether our perceptions align with the external world. From a rational perspective, the burden of proof lies on IR to explain why positing such an unreachable reality is more reasonable.

[Interlocutor Responded]]Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.

[ChatGpt] 2. IR’s Metaphysical Speculation is Less Rational
Indirect Realism relies on the metaphysical assumption that there is a noumenon—a world entirely independent of our minds—that our perceptions represent indirectly. However, this assumption cannot be proven or directly experienced. It remains a speculative hypothesis that creates an epistemic problem: how do we know our representations reflect this world accurately?

TI-ER, on the other hand, is grounded in the reality we experience. It avoids metaphysical speculation by focusing on how reality appears to us and the conditions that make knowledge possible. Phenomena are real for us, and knowledge is possible because we engage with this structured reality. There is no need to posit an unreachable mind-independent world beyond our experience.

[Interlocutor responded]Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.

[ChatGpt]3. IR’s Vulnerability to Radical Skepticism
IR’s reality-gap (veil of perception) introduces radical skepticism because it posits that our access to reality is always indirect. This leaves us questioning whether our perceptions truly correspond to the mind-independent external world. From a rational perspective, this skeptical vulnerability weakens IR’s claim to being the more “realistic” theory.

Kant’s TI-ER avoids this issue by recognizing that we can know the world as it appears to us (phenomena). The noumenon, in Kant’s view, serves as a regulative idea, helping us understand the limits of our knowledge but not as a hidden reality we’re failing to access. This approach is more reasonable because it doesn’t require us to doubt the reality of what we experience.

[Interlocutor Responded] Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.

[Me]I don't believe TI-ER leads to solipsism since ER acknowledge the real empirical self, selves those of others and the empirical external world relatively.
TI-ER can justify the existence of hallucinations and illusions via the scientific and psychological framework and system.

How would you counter the interlocutor's response to the above?
Note: I will post his response to point 4 & 5 later.
Here is ChatGpt's response:

ChatGpt Wrote:
Your interlocutor's repeated accusation that Kant's Transcendental Idealism (TI-ER) leads to solipsism overlooks important aspects of Kant's philosophy.
TI-ER is not solipsistic because Kant distinguishes between the empirical world (which includes other selves, external objects, and shared experiences) and the noumenal realm (which we can’t know directly).
In fact, Kant’s empirical realism strongly affirms the reality of the world we experience through the categories of the mind.
Let’s break down the main counterpoints:

1. TI-ER Does Not Lead to Solipsism
Solipsism is the belief that only one’s own mind is certain to exist. However, Kant’s TI-ER does not deny the existence of the external world, other people, or objective reality. Instead, Kant's framework maintains that while we cannot know the thing-in-itself (noumenon), we can know the world of phenomena, which includes other selves and objects we interact with.

Kant’s empirical realism claims that the world we perceive (the empirical world) is real for us and shared by others. So, empirical selves and empirical objects are real within this framework, and they are not reducible to a solitary mind. Solipsism is fundamentally different because it denies any external reality except the individual’s mind, whereas Kant affirms that we experience a shared, structured reality.

2. TI-ER Can Account for Hallucinations and Illusions
Hallucinations and illusions can be explained within Kant's framework. They occur when our cognitive faculties or sensory apparatus malfunction or are deceived, leading us to misinterpret phenomena. Importantly, hallucinations and illusions are empirical phenomena; they are real experiences within our perceptual framework, even though they do not correspond to objective reality.

From the scientific and psychological perspectives, hallucinations are studied as distortions of perception. Kant's TI-ER doesn’t deny that such experiences occur; instead, it provides a foundation for how our minds organize sensory data and why, sometimes, this process can be flawed. Illusions and hallucinations are treated as exceptions within the broader structure of how we perceive and interact with the world.

3. Why TI-ER is More Rational and Avoids the Problem of Radical Skepticism
Your interlocutor's insistence that IR is more realistic because it "accepts" uncertainty (in relation to the veil of perception) is misguided.
While IR maintains a reality-gap, creating radical skepticism about whether our perceptions accurately reflect an external world, TI-ER avoids this pitfall by affirming the reality of phenomena and treating the noumenon as a regulative idea.

In contrast, IR’s metaphysical assumption of an absolutely mind-independent noumenon introduces unnecessary epistemic uncertainty (the veil of perception), as there is no direct access to this mind-independent world. From a rational perspective, positing an unreachable reality while claiming it’s real without proof is less justified than Kant’s TI-ER, which grounds reality in experience.

4. TI-ER Affirms the Shared Reality of Others
Empirical Realism (ER) in Kant’s system acknowledges the existence of others and an empirical external world. The fact that we interact with other people and shared objects underlines the reality of these experiences, even if they are shaped by our cognitive faculties. This distinction ensures that TI-ER does not collapse into solipsism, since it affirms the inter-subjective nature of reality.

Conclusion:
Your interlocutor’s response that TI-ER leads to solipsism and cannot explain hallucinations or illusions is incorrect.
Kant's framework, through empirical realism, acknowledges the reality of other selves and the external world, while hallucinations and illusions are addressed as exceptions within the broader functioning of our cognitive system.

Additionally, TI-ER is more rational than IR because it avoids the reality-gap and radical skepticism introduced by positing an absolutely unknowable noumenon that IR cannot prove or directly justify.
...................

I suggest you read the above responses thoroughly.
I didn't read it. I already countered anything ChatGPT has, now it's your turn.
Veritas Aequitas
Posts: 15722
Joined: Wed Jul 11, 2012 4:41 am

Re: Kant's T_Idealism-Empirical_Realism vs Indirect Realism

Post by Veritas Aequitas »

VA to ChatGpt wrote:Here is my interlocutor's response to point 4 and 5.

[ChatGpt] 4. TI-ER is More Aligned with Scientific Practice
Modern science operates within a framework similar to TI-ER: we construct theoretical models of reality based on empirical data, acknowledging that we may never know the world in itself but that our models are sufficiently accurate for practical purposes. This scientific mindset aligns more with Kant’s empirical realism than with IR, which posits a reality beyond our perception that science cannot directly engage with.

From a general rational perspective, TI-ER is more compatible with how we actually engage with reality in everyday life and in science. It provides a workable framework for knowledge without introducing speculative, inaccessible entities like the IR’s noumenon.

[Interlocutor Responded]This a blatant lie, IR and not TI-ER is the default in science exactly because it's consistent with IR.

[ChatGpt]5. Reality-Gap vs. No Reality-Gap
IR is often described as more honest because it “accepts uncertainty.” However, the reality-gap it creates by insisting on a mind-independent noumenon leads to more epistemic uncertainty than is necessary. It leaves us with the problem of never knowing whether we have accurate knowledge of the external world.

TI-ER, by focusing on what we can know (phenomena) and rejecting the idea of a constitutive noumenon, avoids this reality-gap entirely. What is real for us is what appears through the structures of our cognition. This is a more rational and practical view of reality, as it doesn’t lead to the skepticism that arises from the gap introduced by IR.

[Interlocutor's Responded ]Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. There is no problem with the external world because there is no external world at all. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.

[ME] I believe Indirect Realism assumes an absolutely mind-independent external world that is mediated via the sense data to the subject.

What is your respond to the above beside the charge of solipsism, hallucination and illusions which you have responded earlier.
Here's ChatGpt's Response:
ChatGpt wrote:Your interlocutor's responses seem to involve two main arguments beyond the already addressed charges of solipsism, hallucinations, and illusions:

Claim that IR is the default in science and not TI-ER.
Misrepresentation of TI-ER as denying the external world, resulting in an accusation of solipsism.

Let’s address these points one by one.

1. Is IR the Default in Science?
Your interlocutor claims that Indirect Realism (IR) is the default position in science, implying that TI-ER is not compatible with scientific practice. This is not accurate when we examine the philosophical underpinnings of science. Here's why:

Scientific Models and TI-ER Compatibility: Modern scientific practice involves creating theoretical models that organize empirical data to make predictions about phenomena. These models are not direct representations of an absolutely mind-independent reality but conceptual tools that help us understand and predict the world as it appears to us. This approach aligns more with Kant’s empirical realism (ER) than with IR, which posits an unmediated access to a mind-independent world that we cannot directly verify.

Kant’s Framework and Scientific Practice: Kant’s TI-ER emphasizes that we engage with the world through cognitive categories (e.g., space, time, causality) that structure our experience. Science operates within this same structured framework, focusing on empirical phenomena that can be observed and measured. Scientists use models and theories to predict and explain phenomena, acknowledging that these models may not reflect the “thing-in-itself” but are sufficient for practical purposes—this is exactly what Kant argues.

Empirical Focus of Science: Science doesn’t concern itself with noumena (the unknowable reality posited by IR). Instead, it focuses on the phenomena—the observable, measurable aspects of the world. TI-ER, by focusing on the reality of phenomena, aligns more closely with the methodology of science than IR, which speculates about an unknowable external world (noumenon) beyond our direct experience. Hence, Kant’s view is more aligned with scientific pragmatism because it doesn’t require unnecessary speculation about an unreachable world.

Scientific Realism and Models: Even in scientific realism, the aim is not to claim that our models provide a one-to-one correspondence with an objective, mind-independent world. Rather, models are seen as useful approximations of reality as we experience it. This fits well with TI-ER, which acknowledges the limitations of human cognition but asserts the practical utility of empirical knowledge.

In conclusion, the claim that IR is the default in science overlooks the fact that modern science, much like Kant’s philosophy, deals primarily with observable phenomena and does not concern itself with an unobservable noumenon that IR insists on.

2. Misrepresentation of TI-ER: Denial of External World
Your interlocutor repeatedly asserts that TI-ER denies the external world, leading to solipsism. However, this is a misinterpretation of Kant’s philosophy. Here's why:

TI-ER Acknowledges an External World: In Kant's framework, there is indeed an external world—the world of phenomena that we all interact with. This external world is structured by our cognitive faculties, such as space, time, and causality. Kant is not denying the existence of objects, other people, or the empirical world. He is simply explaining that our knowledge of these things is shaped by our mental structures—we know the world as it appears to us, not as it might exist “in itself.”

Empirical Realism vs. Noumenon: Kant’s empirical realism (ER) insists that the external world is real for us, but we only know it through the lens of our cognitive structures. This doesn’t imply the world doesn’t exist or that we’re trapped in a subjective bubble (solipsism). It only means that we experience the world as it is mediated by our minds. The noumenon (thing-in-itself) is a regulative idea that helps us recognize the limits of our knowledge, not something we are “missing out on.”

Regulative Idea, Not Constitutive Reality: Kant treats the noumenon as a regulative concept that reminds us we cannot have unmediated access to a completely mind-independent world. This is very different from IR’s constitutive noumenon, which assumes the real existence of a world that we can never know directly. Kant’s approach avoids the speculative nature of IR and doesn’t claim that there’s “nothing” beyond phenomena—it simply refrains from claiming direct knowledge of it.

Conclusion:
Your interlocutor's criticisms misrepresent TI-ER by incorrectly claiming it denies the external world and that science defaults to IR, when in fact TI-ER is more compatible with scientific practice due to its pragmatic focus on phenomena and empirical knowledge. Far from solipsism, Kant’s empirical realism acknowledges the shared, external world we all experience, while avoiding the epistemic uncertainty and reality-gap created by IR's assumption of an unknowable, mind-independent reality.

These arguments show why TI-ER is more rational and practical than IR, not only from within Kant’s own framework but from a broader general perspective of how we engage with and understand the world.
Atla
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Re: Kant's T_Idealism-Empirical_Realism vs Indirect Realism

Post by Atla »

Veritas Aequitas wrote: Sat Oct 12, 2024 8:43 am
VA to ChatGpt wrote:Here is my interlocutor's response to point 4 and 5.

[ChatGpt] 4. TI-ER is More Aligned with Scientific Practice
Modern science operates within a framework similar to TI-ER: we construct theoretical models of reality based on empirical data, acknowledging that we may never know the world in itself but that our models are sufficiently accurate for practical purposes. This scientific mindset aligns more with Kant’s empirical realism than with IR, which posits a reality beyond our perception that science cannot directly engage with.

From a general rational perspective, TI-ER is more compatible with how we actually engage with reality in everyday life and in science. It provides a workable framework for knowledge without introducing speculative, inaccessible entities like the IR’s noumenon.

[Interlocutor Responded]This a blatant lie, IR and not TI-ER is the default in science exactly because it's consistent with IR.

[ChatGpt]5. Reality-Gap vs. No Reality-Gap
IR is often described as more honest because it “accepts uncertainty.” However, the reality-gap it creates by insisting on a mind-independent noumenon leads to more epistemic uncertainty than is necessary. It leaves us with the problem of never knowing whether we have accurate knowledge of the external world.

TI-ER, by focusing on what we can know (phenomena) and rejecting the idea of a constitutive noumenon, avoids this reality-gap entirely. What is real for us is what appears through the structures of our cognition. This is a more rational and practical view of reality, as it doesn’t lead to the skepticism that arises from the gap introduced by IR.

[Interlocutor's Responded ]Yes, but at the cost of becoming a solipsist, and this also can't explain things like hallucinations and illusions. There is no problem with the external world because there is no external world at all. If this is more rational to you then there is probably something very wrong with you.

[ME] I believe Indirect Realism assumes an absolutely mind-independent external world that is mediated via the sense data to the subject.

What is your respond to the above beside the charge of solipsism, hallucination and illusions which you have responded earlier.
Here's ChatGpt's Response:
ChatGpt wrote:Your interlocutor's responses seem to involve two main arguments beyond the already addressed charges of solipsism, hallucinations, and illusions:

Claim that IR is the default in science and not TI-ER.
Misrepresentation of TI-ER as denying the external world, resulting in an accusation of solipsism.

Let’s address these points one by one.

1. Is IR the Default in Science?
Your interlocutor claims that Indirect Realism (IR) is the default position in science, implying that TI-ER is not compatible with scientific practice. This is not accurate when we examine the philosophical underpinnings of science. Here's why:

Scientific Models and TI-ER Compatibility: Modern scientific practice involves creating theoretical models that organize empirical data to make predictions about phenomena. These models are not direct representations of an absolutely mind-independent reality but conceptual tools that help us understand and predict the world as it appears to us. This approach aligns more with Kant’s empirical realism (ER) than with IR, which posits an unmediated access to a mind-independent world that we cannot directly verify.

Kant’s Framework and Scientific Practice: Kant’s TI-ER emphasizes that we engage with the world through cognitive categories (e.g., space, time, causality) that structure our experience. Science operates within this same structured framework, focusing on empirical phenomena that can be observed and measured. Scientists use models and theories to predict and explain phenomena, acknowledging that these models may not reflect the “thing-in-itself” but are sufficient for practical purposes—this is exactly what Kant argues.

Empirical Focus of Science: Science doesn’t concern itself with noumena (the unknowable reality posited by IR). Instead, it focuses on the phenomena—the observable, measurable aspects of the world. TI-ER, by focusing on the reality of phenomena, aligns more closely with the methodology of science than IR, which speculates about an unknowable external world (noumenon) beyond our direct experience. Hence, Kant’s view is more aligned with scientific pragmatism because it doesn’t require unnecessary speculation about an unreachable world.

Scientific Realism and Models: Even in scientific realism, the aim is not to claim that our models provide a one-to-one correspondence with an objective, mind-independent world. Rather, models are seen as useful approximations of reality as we experience it. This fits well with TI-ER, which acknowledges the limitations of human cognition but asserts the practical utility of empirical knowledge.

In conclusion, the claim that IR is the default in science overlooks the fact that modern science, much like Kant’s philosophy, deals primarily with observable phenomena and does not concern itself with an unobservable noumenon that IR insists on.

2. Misrepresentation of TI-ER: Denial of External World
Your interlocutor repeatedly asserts that TI-ER denies the external world, leading to solipsism. However, this is a misinterpretation of Kant’s philosophy. Here's why:

TI-ER Acknowledges an External World: In Kant's framework, there is indeed an external world—the world of phenomena that we all interact with. This external world is structured by our cognitive faculties, such as space, time, and causality. Kant is not denying the existence of objects, other people, or the empirical world. He is simply explaining that our knowledge of these things is shaped by our mental structures—we know the world as it appears to us, not as it might exist “in itself.”

Empirical Realism vs. Noumenon: Kant’s empirical realism (ER) insists that the external world is real for us, but we only know it through the lens of our cognitive structures. This doesn’t imply the world doesn’t exist or that we’re trapped in a subjective bubble (solipsism). It only means that we experience the world as it is mediated by our minds. The noumenon (thing-in-itself) is a regulative idea that helps us recognize the limits of our knowledge, not something we are “missing out on.”

Regulative Idea, Not Constitutive Reality: Kant treats the noumenon as a regulative concept that reminds us we cannot have unmediated access to a completely mind-independent world. This is very different from IR’s constitutive noumenon, which assumes the real existence of a world that we can never know directly. Kant’s approach avoids the speculative nature of IR and doesn’t claim that there’s “nothing” beyond phenomena—it simply refrains from claiming direct knowledge of it.

Conclusion:
Your interlocutor's criticisms misrepresent TI-ER by incorrectly claiming it denies the external world and that science defaults to IR, when in fact TI-ER is more compatible with scientific practice due to its pragmatic focus on phenomena and empirical knowledge. Far from solipsism, Kant’s empirical realism acknowledges the shared, external world we all experience, while avoiding the epistemic uncertainty and reality-gap created by IR's assumption of an unknowable, mind-independent reality.

These arguments show why TI-ER is more rational and practical than IR, not only from within Kant’s own framework but from a broader general perspective of how we engage with and understand the world.
I didn't read it. I already countered anything ChatGPT has, now it's your turn.
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