Re: Arguing against the validity of reason - D'Souza - Kant
Quote:
Originally Posted by Lotus
Try two different claims:
1) The coffee table is strong enough to hold my cup of tea
2) The coffee table, as I perceive it, is strong enough to hold my cup of tea
Please note that the second claim is softer. It does not imply that my reasoning abilities are as direct, objective, and solid as the first claim does.
Note that either way I'm going to put my cup on the table. Or, returning to the baseball scenario, either way the batter is going to hit the baseball he perceives. But with the second claim the faculty of reason is more limited in terms of scope.
Here we can understand that Kant did not deny reason completely. He just wanted to soften its claims on reality.
Does this make sense?
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Yes. I think. In the first example, the statement is made as an assertion of truth about the table's attributes - in of itself, by itself and without any perception by me needed, it is a truth that the table is strong enough to hold your cup of tea. In the second, you make no assertion as to the table's innate characteristics; rather, you simply state your perception of the table's attributes.
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