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Idealism

Idealism. The Atomic Theory of Matter. The atomic theory poses a challenge to theories of substances or objects Atomic theory: things are composed of atoms; properties of things depend on nature and motion of atoms Things are not as they appear. Dignaga (c. 450), Buddhist.

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Idealism

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  1. Idealism

  2. The Atomic Theory of Matter • The atomic theory poses a challenge to theories of substances or objects • Atomic theory: things are composed of atoms; properties of things depend on nature and motion of atoms • Things are not as they appear

  3. Dignaga (c. 450), Buddhist • “Though atoms serve as causes of the consciousness of the sense-organs, they are not its actual objects like the sense organs; because the consciousness does not represent the image of the atoms. The consciousness does not arise from what is represented in it. Because they do not exist in substance just like the double moon. Thus both the external things are unfit to be the real objects of consciousness.”

  4. Actual and Internal Objects • Aristotle: objects cause perceptions, and are represented in them • Causes of perception = objects of perception • Dignaga: No— • causes are the atoms— actual objects [alambana] • objects are appearances— internal objects [artha]

  5. Causes and Effects • Causes of perception are the atoms • We don’t see atoms, but their effects • What we see doesn’t exist in reality; it is “like the double moon” • How can we distinguish the aspects of the effects (appearances) that do match the causes?

  6. Primary Qualities • Descartes: We perceive clearly and distinctly only the mathematical properties of objects: size, shape, motion • Only they reflect the true natures of things • Locke: Primary qualities are inseparable from objects; atoms have them • Primary qualities are those objects possess according to the atomic theory of matter • They produce simple ideas in us that resemble the primary qualities in the objects

  7. Secondary Qualities • Secondary qualities are effects of objects on our nervous systems • They produce ideas in us that do NOT resemble them • Secondary qualities depend on primary qualities • Secondary qualities are response-dependent: to have one is just to produce a certain effect in a perceiver

  8. Real and Nominal Essence • Aristotle and Aquinas identify: • The essence of x = the properties necessary to x • The quiddity of x = the definition of xin re • The nature of x = what makes x what it is • Locke: nominal essence = quiddity: uses secondary qualities • Real essence = nature: real internal constitution

  9. Idealist Critique • Dignaga: We know world only through sense organs • So, we know objects only insofar as they become internal objects • They are objects of consciousness, constituted by consciousness • We know objects only as conditioned by consciousness

  10. Argument for Idealism • We have reason to believe that something exists only if we can know it • We can know an object only by making it an object of consciousness • Any object of consciousness is conditioned by consciousness • Anything conditioned by consciousness is mind-dependent • So, we have reason to believe that a thing exists only if it is mind-dependent

  11. George Berkeley (1685-1753) • Idealism best defense of common sense against scepticism • Descartes’s and Locke’s ideas of objects make no sense • Attack on primary qualities and on substance

  12. Against Primary Qualities • We have no basis for thinking any of our ideas corresponds to some mind-independent reality • We cannot judge resemblance to reality • Perceptions of width, height, etc., vary while objects remain unchanged

  13. Esse est Percipi • We have access only to what is before the mind • A thing can exist only if it is perceived • Do things go out of existence when we aren’t looking at them? No— because God keeps an eye on them for us

  14. Kant’s Copernican Revolution • Rationalists: universality and necessity require synthetic a priori • Hume: source not in the world but in us • Kant: source is within us— but it is reason, not custom or habit

  15. Kant’s Categories • There are innate concepts— the categories • They are logical forms of judgment • They apply only to experience

  16. Knowledge —> Objects • “It has hitherto been assumed that our knowledge must conform to the objects; but all attempts to ascertain anything about these objects a priori, by means of concepts, and thus to extend the range of our knowledge, have been rendered abortive by this assumption. Let us then make the experiment whether we may not be more successful in metaphysics, if we assume that the objects must conform to our knowledge.”

  17. Kant & Copernicus • “We here propose to do just what Copernicus did in attempting to explain the celestial movements. When he found that he could make no progress by assuming that all the heavenly bodies revolved round the spectator, he reversed the process, and tried the experiment of assuming that the spectator revolved, while the stars remained at rest. We may make the same experiment with regard to the intuition of objects. If the intuition must conform to the nature of the objects, I do not see how we can know anything of them a priori. If, on the other hand, the object conforms to the nature of our faculty of intuition, I can then easily conceive the possibility of such an a priori knowledge.”

  18. Laws of the Understanding “Before objects, are given to me, that is, a priori, I must presuppose in myself laws of the understanding which are expressed in concepts a priori. To these concepts, then, all the objects of experience must necessarily conform.”

  19. Limits of Knowledge • “. . . we only know in things a priori that which we ourselves place in them.” • Laws that govern realm of experience are in us— the laws of the understanding • So, we can know things only as experienced by us— not as they are in themselves

  20. Kant’s Rationalism • There are innate ideas: pure concepts of the understanding (thecategories) • There are synthetic a priori truths (laws of the understanding) • But they apply only within realm of experience

  21. Phenomena • Phenomena: appearances, objects as we perceive them • Categories apply to them • A priori principles apply to them • We can know them with universality and necessity

  22. Noumena • Noumena: things-in-themselves, unconditioned by our cognitive faculties • Categories don’t apply to them • A priori principles don’t apply to them • We can’t know them at all

  23. Descartes/Hume/Kant Descartes Hume Kant Synthetic a priori? Yes No Yes Knowledge Beyond exp. Yes No No Knowledge of world as Yes No No it is

  24. Plato’s Philosophy of Mind The Good Participation This is a triangle Form Recollection Perception Object

  25. Kant’s Philosophy of Mind Construction This is a triangle Concept Perception Object

  26. Kant’s Philosophy of Mind Understanding This is a triangle Concept Appearance Sensibility Thing in itself

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