When we first see something or even a person, our minds make up a judgement about them or it. Whether it is true or not we still do it. Sometimes in the end it can be completely wrong or right. We can never know about something until we observe them and learn about them. In the end, we never really can know the full truth about something no matter what. There is always more to someone or something.
Friday, May 16, 2008
Kant- Appearance and Judgements
"When an appearance is given us, we are still quite free as to how we should judge the matter. The appearance depends upon the senses, but the judgement upon the understanding; and the only question is whether in the determination of the object is there is truth or not."
Kant- How is nature possible
On page 56 Kant asks how nature is possible. Nature is possible because we are able to touch things, see things, hear things, taste things, and smell them. Everyone else is able to do the same things too. We are able to share what things look and taste like. How can nature not be possible? How could we all be seeing the same things? I don't understand how you can argue with that.
Kant- Perception and Judgement
On pages 39 and 40, Kant talks about perception and judgement. He says that judgements of experience are more valid then perception. I don't really see the difference between the two. Perception is your awareness of something by your senses or to understand something. But isn't a judgement just a guess? So why would that be more valid then perception.
Kant- External Experience and internal experience
On pages 72 and 73 Kant talks about external experiences and internal experiences. If I'm reading this right when he says external he means our bodies (takes of space) and internal is our soul. I think this subject goes back to something I learned in Psychology. Some people believe the mind and brain work together and are aware of each other but others think one works and not the other. I think they both work together. Our mind thinks what were gonna do or has thoughts and judgements and the brain is what actually does it. They both have a connection to each other.
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Kant- Nature and Experience
"But experience teaches us what exists and how it exists, but never that it must necessarily exist so and not otherwise...Experience therefore can never teach us the nature of things in themselves."-35
Experience teaches about everything around us. By seeing and observing things in life, we learn about them and why things are certain ways. We see other people and we understand why they exist. By Kant saying experience can never teach us the nature of things in themselves, I believe he is saying just by going about our day to day life seeing different things we won't just learn about everything beyond the picture that is in front of us. I agree with this; we have to go beyond just the experience to know the truth in things.
Kant- Math
"I shall confine my assertion to pure mathematics, they very concept of which implies that it contains pure a priori and not empirical cognition." -pg. 11
If I am reading this right, I think Kant is saying that math is a priori and if priori means not learning from experience. I would have to disagree with Kant on this one. We learn math from others. We learn it by someone teaching us how to add and subtract. By going to school and listening to our teachers we are learning by experience. I'm not sure if that was what he was getting at but that's what I got out of it.
Please tell me what you think.
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
Kant- mathematics
Kant talks about the normalness of mathematics and everything about math is the way it is just because it is the way it is. There is defintely talking about skepticism when they realize math is the way it is. It is just a natural way of lie that 2 +2 = 4 and that 90 degrees is straight. It is just the way that it is. Alot of rationalists will always have some kind of doubt but hey, it will always be like this no matter what.
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