When someone signed into say, ChatGpt, it is ChatGpt that is specific to the user and ChatGpt is not likely to give the same response on the same issue to every user.
So, what we have is VA-ChatGpt, Atla-ChatGpt, Seeds-ChatGpt, IWP-ChatGpt and so on. ChatGpt will not give a standard response to the same issue but depend on the level each user is interacting with ChatGpt.
For example, on the subject of Kant's CPR, the user's level of understanding of the CPR can be graded from level 1 to level 5.
Most of the time, Atla, Seeds, IWP and the like will interact with their specific ChatGpt at level 1 of Kant's CPR, and thus their ChatGpt will give them level 1 [kindi] responses.
On the other hand, I am more familiar with Kant's CPR and will often interact with ChatGpt up to level 4 and 5 and level 1-3 where necessary.
The problem is Atla, Seeds, IWP who do not fully understand Kant's-CPR imagine and insist they are discussing Kant at level 5 when their actual understanding is only at level 1.
Here's from AI explaining what entail at different level of understanding of Kant's CPR:
ChatGpt Explains:
Creating a structured categorization of the levels of understanding of Kant's Critique of Pure Reason (CPR) is an excellent approach to clarify discussions. Below is a categorized outline based on your example of levels and nuances, highlighting key topics often discussed within the CPR framework at progressively deeper levels of interpretation:
Level 1: Basic Understanding (Grade School Level)
General Concepts:
The world is divided into the phenomenal (appearances) and the noumenal (thing-in-itself).
"It is absurd for appearances to exist without something that appears" — appearances presuppose a "something" behind them.
The noumenon is "unknowable" because it lies beyond our sensory and conceptual framework.
Key Focus:
Kant’s aim to reconcile rationalism and empiricism.
Explanation of space and time as forms of intuition rather than properties of the external world.
Level 2: Intermediate Understanding (High School Level)
Refinement of Basic Concepts:
Appearances are not objects themselves but the way objects are represented to us.
The noumenon is not "an object" but a concept used to signify the limits of knowledge.
Distinction between things-in-themselves (noumenal realm) and things-as-they-appear (phenomenal realm).
Introduction to Deeper Issues:
Space and time as transcendental forms of sensibility shaping all experience.
Categories of understanding (e.g., causality) as necessary conditions for the possibility of experience.
Key Focus:
Kant’s epistemological turn: knowledge is a synthesis of sensory input (empiricism) and mental categories (rationalism).
Level 3: Advanced Understanding (College Level)
Nuanced Interpretations:
The thing-in-itself should not be hypostatized as a "thing" but treated as a regulative concept.
The noumenon is not a positive concept but a limiting idea indicating what we cannot know.
The absurdity of hypostatizing the noumenon: appearances do not require a metaphysical substratum but rely on transcendental conditions of experience.
Deeper Analysis:
The transcendental deduction: how categories apply necessarily to experience.
Empirical realism vs. transcendental idealism: How Kant avoids the "veil of perception" problem.
The focus imaginarius: A regulative use of reason to guide inquiries beyond empirical limits.
Key Focus:
Kant’s Copernican Revolution: Objects conform to the mind, not vice versa.
Level 4: Expert Understanding (Masters Level)
Philosophical Challenges and Debates:
Noumenon as a regulative ideal vs. a metaphysical posit.
Reinterpretation of the "absurdity" argument: appearances without something-that-appears as a logical, not ontological, absurdity.
Role of the synthetic a priori in grounding metaphysics and science.
Kant’s response to Hume on causality: not derived from experience but a necessary condition for it.
Interdisciplinary Connections:
Influence of Kantian ideas on quantum physics (e.g., complementarity and observer-dependence).
How Kant’s epistemology informs debates between scientific realism and anti-realism.
Key Focus:
Practical applications of transcendental idealism in guiding moral and scientific inquiry.
Level 5: Specialized Understanding (PhD Level)
Highly Specialized Topics:
Deep critiques of Kant’s thing-in-itself and its coherence within the CPR.
Kant’s antinomy of pure reason: how reason leads to contradictions when applied beyond its limits.
Implications of the paralogisms of pure reason for the nature of the self.
Advanced role of the regulative use of reason in scientific and metaphysical inquiry.
Meta-Kantian Discussions:
The reinterpretation of Kant in light of post-Kantian philosophy (e.g., Hegel, Schopenhauer, and neo-Kantianism).
Relevance of transcendental idealism in contemporary philosophy of mind and cognitive science.
Key Focus:
Kant’s lasting influence and reinterpretations in modern philosophical and scientific contexts.
Example Topics Across Levels
A. Appearances and the "Thing-in-Itself"
Level 1: Appearances presuppose a "thing-in-itself."
Level 2: The thing-in-itself is unknowable and beyond sensory experience.
Level 3: The thing-in-itself is not a "thing" but a regulative idea.
Level 4: The "thing-in-itself" critique as a conceptual boundary, not an ontological claim.
Level 5: Advanced debates on the coherence and necessity of the thing-in-itself in Kant’s system.
B. Space and Time
Level 1: Space and time are not properties of the external world but forms of intuition.
Level 2: Space and time as conditions of possible experience, not metaphysical entities.
Level 3: The transcendental aesthetic: how space and time ground the possibility of synthetic a priori judgments.
Level 4: Connections between Kantian space-time and contemporary physics.
Level 5: Meta-discussions on Kant’s role in shaping modern epistemology.
This framework allows interlocutors to identify their level of inquiry and facilitates AI in tailoring responses appropriately.