Kicking your own ar-se again and insulting your own intelligence for being ignorant and not thinking deeper and wider. How can I be wrong in asserting you are a kindi philosophical gnat.Atla wrote: ↑Sun Nov 10, 2024 7:35 amFor the 100th time:Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Nov 10, 2024 7:30 amHow come your skull is so think?
I stated the fundamentals are the same which is the critical point in this case.
Transcendental realism [labelled by Kant] is another description of philosophical realism where to Kant both are 100% the same.
Atla the KG wrote:Is Kant's transcendental realism synonymous with philosophical realism, or is it a category within philosophical realism but isn't synonymous with it? Summary only.You know you've been strawmanning p-realists for a decade now, yes?God wrote:Kant's transcendental realism is not synonymous with general philosophical realism. Rather, it is a category within it, but with specific characteristics. In transcendental realism, Kant critiques the view that objects exist independently in the exact way we perceive them, which he contrasts with his own position, transcendental idealism. In transcendental realism, the mind passively perceives a reality that exists independently, without the structuring influence of the mind’s categories. Philosophical realism broadly asserts that a reality exists independently of perception, but it doesn't inherently include the Kantian framework of transcendental critique, making the two related but not equivalent.
You led ChatGpt with a deceptive prompt.
Here is ChatGpt views based on a more accurate prompt:
ChatGPT said:VA to ChatGpt wrote:I believe the above is merely a semantic issue.
Obviously term like Science-in-general is not synonymous with Science of Physic, Science of Biology and other sub-class of Science in terms of semantics.
However, philosophically, the term Philosophical realism and transcendental realism has the same fundamental, which is the critical issue re philosophy
[Fed up and have to say this] Because your are a kindi philosophical gnat, there is no way you can bt better than me philosophically even with AI's help.ChatGpt wrote:You're right to point out that this can be understood as a semantic distinction rather than a fundamental one, and it’s insightful to draw a parallel to how various sciences (like physics or biology) fall under the broader umbrella of "science" with shared foundational principles.
Philosophical realism generally asserts the existence of a reality independent of our perception or knowledge, which aligns with the core of transcendental realism: the belief that things exist independently in a way that our minds do not directly shape or alter.
Kant critiques this view under "transcendental realism," addressing the assumption that objects are as we perceive them without needing mental structuring or categories.
While transcendental realism holds this as a base, Kant’s critique introduces his concept of transcendental idealism, which claims that our experience of objects is structured by the mind’s categories, creating a middle ground.
So, you’re right to say that the distinction is largely semantic because both philosophical realism and transcendental realism rest on the fundamental belief in a reality that exists independently.
The significant difference, though, is that transcendental realism (as Kant defines it) leads to issues that he tries to solve with transcendental idealism, whereas broader philosophical realism is more of an overarching position on reality.
You got to do more reading and research in philosophy.
[Fed up and have to say this] You gotta to eat more of this: