Robin
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2004
- Messages
- 14,971
If you expected people to understand your original claim about the association between science and metaphysical assumptions, why do you think those same people would fail to understand the counter claim that scientists have for well over a century, carefully examined these assumptions and largely disavowed them?Robin,
I'm not going to respond to the majority of your post about Neurath and the Vienna Circle because most people who will read this won't be able to understand the context of the discussion.
Kant did not raise that problem, he said that "the world as it is in itself" could only be meaningful in the negative sense as something that was unknowable.The same one that was raised by Kant. What is the relationship between the the world as it appears to us and the world as it is in itself, how can we know the answer to this question and what does it have to do with things like time and causality?
OK, so that's more than one problem, but it's all interlinked.
Kant only raised the concept of the noumenon in order to all but dismiss it and Mach got rid of it altogether. It is an irrelevant meaningless concept.
Time and causality simple (metaphysically speaking) - we have mathematical models and we check them against observations. No need for the "thing in itself" whatever that means.
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