Quantum Perception
Bluelighter
I say it can't. To me existence is experience; all of it is subjective with no objective reality what so ever....
What are your thoughts?
What are your thoughts?
The thing-in-itself concept is not defined negatively. Rather, "the objects have to announce [ob-ject, objectify] themselves in our consciousness, the objects are not produced by mere thinking (creative intuition, divine mode), but they have to announce themselves (derivative intuition, human mode). Hence there has to be an unknown X (thing-in-itself) that presents itself as a phenomenon to consciousness."The Noumenon has the same problem in its definition as does god.
the Kantian (transcendental) subject formats the thing according its apriori categories (space/time).The X that presents itself is defined by its form, shape, function, etc.
Kant makes the difference between a transcendental and empircal subject.These attributes are dependent on our nervous systems.
the Kantian (transcendental) subject formats the thing according its apriori categories (space/time).
I am arguing that "it" (the topic which point to this ungraspable object) doesn't have any a priori categories.
It has no a priori nature. But that word is pretty awesome, I'm glad he coined it.
From here, solipsism is purely a mental/conceptual 'box' dependent on the formulation of 'separate other minds'.Don't you find that such a position puts you back in the solipsism 'box'. If you argue that nothing exists outside of perception what causes the phenomena in your mind, absent a noumenal reality that is objectively real?
The 'problem' with this sort of discussion, is that the mind is time and space.
Any conceptualization of "continuity over time" (i.e. existence), distance over space, etc. requires a mind to do the conceptualizing and observing.
Thus, any attempt to divorce the observer (mind) from "time and space" becomes immediately a one-sided absurdity. There's no such thing as time and space without a mind to conceive of time and space.
If one sees this clearly, non-separation is "always already the case" and requires no arguments.
Fwiw, my own answer to "if a tree falls in the woods and no one is there to hear it fall, does it make a sound?" is this: If no one is there to here it fall, how does anyone know a tree fell in the woods?
It's simple -- the mind's conceiving of an (objective) reality outside itself is false. The mind cannot actually represent an external reality, divorced from the mind.