I have found a truth independent of observation, have you?SpheresOfBalance wrote:
To me 'ALL' Truth is the only thing that is a priori (valid independent of observation), as it's absolute (exists without our knowledge).
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I have found a truth independent of observation, have you?SpheresOfBalance wrote:
To me 'ALL' Truth is the only thing that is a priori (valid independent of observation), as it's absolute (exists without our knowledge).
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Yes it's nature; the universe! And we all are it's children; a fractional part of its symbiosis. Why we continually fuck with it is beyond me, as I can clearly see that with this messing that we do, we build our own annihilation. For some reason we can't see the life for the self, which I find absurd; somehow psychotic.MJA wrote:I have found a truth independent of observation, have you?SpheresOfBalance wrote:
To me 'ALL' Truth is the only thing that is a priori (valid independent of observation), as it's absolute (exists without our knowledge).
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Come on don't be shy, rebuttal please! Share how you differ. My solution does not necessarily preclude consideration.MJA wrote:Sorry I asked,
Good day,
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Thus our opposition of view.SpheresOfBalance wrote:It is not synthetic, it is not mythological, it is in fact the truth as to how things work from the human perspective which is what we are! You can assert that there is something more or less but it is that assertion, that is the synthesis, the mythology, steeped in possible truths which is in fact illusory and nothing more than untruths.lancek4 wrote:Yes, sob, the frame which you delineate above would be 'synthetical'. It is, what I call, an 'arena' of knowledge which allows for Truth-value (ethics). This arena can be called 'mythological', and qualified by what I call 'faith'. Faith makes true. Faith is the complicity of the individual in its mythology.
I feel I should remind that I do not see phiosphy as a way to discern a method for how to deal with life. It is simply an endeavor for truth.
Just because one can postulate that there might be more, doesn't necessarily mean that there is, and it does not necessarily negate that which is.
We apparently have some shared and not shared ideas. I value our 'discourse' as it has helped to bolster my views. It has caused me to think of things that I had not considered, and as such has been invaluable. I do not consider it being a waste of time but rather the opposite. I thank you for your time, as it's the one thing that in the end most shall want more of and as such is a most precious gift. I see these holidays as a celebration of selflessly giving and nothing more, so in the spirit of this I say:lancek4 wrote:Thus our opposition of view.SpheresOfBalance wrote:It is not synthetic, it is not mythological, it is in fact the truth as to how things work from the human perspective which is what we are! You can assert that there is something more or less but it is that assertion, that is the synthesis, the mythology, steeped in possible truths which is in fact illusory and nothing more than untruths.lancek4 wrote:Yes, sob, the frame which you delineate above would be 'synthetical'. It is, what I call, an 'arena' of knowledge which allows for Truth-value (ethics). This arena can be called 'mythological', and qualified by what I call 'faith'. Faith makes true. Faith is the complicity of the individual in its mythology.
I feel I should remind that I do not see phiosphy as a way to discern a method for how to deal with life. It is simply an endeavor for truth.
Just because one can postulate that there might be more, doesn't necessarily mean that there is, and it does not necessarily negate that which is.
I too have my issues with Kant.Barbara Brooks wrote:Kant gives two expositions of space and time: metaphysical and transcendental. The metaphysical expositions of space and time are concerned with clarifying how those intuitions are known independently of experience I
Kant's thesis concerning the transcendental ideality of space and time limits appearances to the forms of sensibility—indeed, they form the limits within which these appearances can count as sensible; and it necessarily implies that the thing-in-itself is neither limited by them nor can it take the form of an appearance within us apart from the bounds of sensibility (A48-49/B66). Yet the thing-in-itself is held by Kant to be the cause of that which appears, and this is where the paradox of Kantian critique resides: while we are prohibited from absolute knowledge of the thing-in-itself, we can impute to it a cause beyond ourselves as a source of representations within us.
Kant's view of space and time reject both the space and time of Aristotelian physics and the space and time of Newtonian physics. In the twentieth century, about a century after the publication of the Critique of Pure Reason, Albert Einstein would introduce a new concept of space and time with the Theory of Relativity. Space and time are no longer space and time but space-time. According to Bertrand Russell, "... That is, from a philosophical and imaginative point of view, perhaps the most important of all the novelties that Einstein introduced." On the other hand, some people would readily assume that Einstein's findings in Physics support the Kantian view of space and time. However, Russell is clear that it is misleading to believe that Einstein's space-time in any way resembles
KANT REGARDED SPACE AND TIME AS A SENSUOUS INTUITION
I'm not sure what other way I could have meant it.SpheresOfBalance wrote:So what happened to your Honesty? I was going to recommend Chaz, but then I realized you didn't quite mean it that way!
I enjoy the presentation of your mind SOb - namaste - perhaps that's why we have entertained this continuing discussion.SpheresOfBalance wrote:I found what you seem to be hung up on:
"Kant's Copernican revolution was the inversion of the traditional relation between the subject of knowledge and the object of that knowledge. Instead of the observed objects affecting the observing subject, the subject's constitution affects the way that the objects are observed. Following this transcendental idealism theory, the possibility of knowledge was thus to be found in the structure of the subject itself, instead of in an objective reality from which nothing can be said."
I think it's a nice theory and one that all empiricists should keep in mind, which is probably the brainchild behind the 'Scientific Method,' but I don't see it as an all inclusive limiting factor. I believe that while observing the object externally, especially form a distance, it's more true than from the opposite end of the spectrum of examining the object from the inside, especially observing that of its smallest fundamental constituents, i.e. smallest particles.
As you work from the exterior to the interior you traverse time in reverse, such that you come to the objects birth so to speak, then as you reverse your perspective from the inside out you tend to more closely follow it's actual course of development. Now I'm not saying that one could ever necessarily knowingly know the object with 100% crystal clarity, that the subject can necessarily remove 100% of it's bias, but I believe with enough time, as I originally asserted many weeks ago, more and more becomes clear as the ability to remove the subjective bias increases incrementally and thus that the absolute truth of the object incrementally comes into focus. But this takes time; a sequential ever expanding network of minute truths in the light of their necessary interdependence negating subjective bias thus increasing truth understanding acuity.
It would seem that you believe that your take is not rubbish, so please enlighten us garbage men if you will. I'm sure that your version will be seen as rubbish by some, demonstrating that your assertion of rubbish was ill conceived. Even I understand that no one actually knows they know; they just believe they know!spike wrote:What's stopping us from seeing the truth?
Perhaps it's some of the rubbish we read on this forum!