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Ierrellus wrote:I could be wrong about Kant. It's just that I don't trust anyone who takes more than one page to complete a sentence. Noumena, to me, appears to be a logical abstraction, not an ontological description. I do not see any resolving of the Cartesian duality in Kant--just more mentalese. He claimed Hume woke him from his dogmatic slumber. IMHO, he never quite woke up. Aristotelian catagorizing doesn't quite explain how metaphysics must be an extension of physics or how gut emotions so often undermine the best of moral intentions.
Frankenstein wrote:Ierrellus wrote:I could be wrong about Kant. It's just that I don't trust anyone who takes more than one page to complete a sentence. Noumena, to me, appears to be a logical abstraction, not an ontological description. I do not see any resolving of the Cartesian duality in Kant--just more mentalese. He claimed Hume woke him from his dogmatic slumber. IMHO, he never quite woke up. Aristotelian catagorizing doesn't quite explain how metaphysics must be an extension of physics or how gut emotions so often undermine the best of moral intentions.
Kant agrees with much of Hume. In fact, Kant actually grounds much of Hume's work; so for Hume to be right, Kant must be right. Kant doesn't say he disagrees about passion ruling over reason in certain circumstances, like if a tiger is chasing you, what do you do? One wouldn't ponder, they run! However, he is making an argument that, for there to be morality, there needs to be autonomy. For there to be autonomy, there needs to be conscious mental life. The problem arises when we attempt to try to explain freewill with science. Science and freewill seem to be at odds, like a oil and water,they just aren't very compatible. How weird would it be to describe freewill with scientific laws and theories? How peculiar would it be for one to understand poetry by looking at the viscera? Thus, we have the great divide we see that continually rears its head. There are many positions to take in order to try to "resolve" this divide, you take the physicalist, while others will take the idealist, or a dual-aspect stance.
Kant never states his dualism, as far as I know. However, It does seem as though it is lurking in the midst. Notice your assertion though, you believe that dualism ought to be "resolved". Your already taking a position that will determine your method, that will determine your answer to your first assumption--and round and round we go!If we are to make any claims, we must stand on axioms that can't be defended. I'm not saying you are wrong in your basic assumptions, I don't know.
Ierrellus wrote:I have known persons of low intelligence who were capable of empathy and compassion.
WW_III_ANGRY wrote:Frankenstein wrote:Ierrellus wrote:I could be wrong about Kant. It's just that I don't trust anyone who takes more than one page to complete a sentence. Noumena, to me, appears to be a logical abstraction, not an ontological description. I do not see any resolving of the Cartesian duality in Kant--just more mentalese. He claimed Hume woke him from his dogmatic slumber. IMHO, he never quite woke up. Aristotelian catagorizing doesn't quite explain how metaphysics must be an extension of physics or how gut emotions so often undermine the best of moral intentions.
Kant agrees with much of Hume. In fact, Kant actually grounds much of Hume's work; so for Hume to be right, Kant must be right. Kant doesn't say he disagrees about passion ruling over reason in certain circumstances, like if a tiger is chasing you, what do you do? One wouldn't ponder, they run! However, he is making an argument that, for there to be morality, there needs to be autonomy. For there to be autonomy, there needs to be conscious mental life. The problem arises when we attempt to try to explain freewill with science. Science and freewill seem to be at odds, like a oil and water,they just aren't very compatible. How weird would it be to describe freewill with scientific laws and theories? How peculiar would it be for one to understand poetry by looking at the viscera? Thus, we have the great divide we see that continually rears its head. There are many positions to take in order to try to "resolve" this divide, you take the physicalist, while others will take the idealist, or a dual-aspect stance.
Kant never states his dualism, as far as I know. However, It does seem as though it is lurking in the midst. Notice your assertion though, you believe that dualism ought to be "resolved". Your already taking a position that will determine your method, that will determine your answer to your first assumption--and round and round we go!If we are to make any claims, we must stand on axioms that can't be defended. I'm not saying you are wrong in your basic assumptions, I don't know.
And what does that have to do with our judgement of right and wrong, do you have any inkling?
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