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Kant Attack Ad by James DiGiovanna and Carey Burtt

Channel: Education
Uploaded: December 8, 2007 at 1:52 pm
Author: KingHotPants

Length: 00:00:56
Rating: 4.75
Views: 219030

Tags: Immanuel Kant Friedrich Nietzsche James DiGiovanna Carey Burtt

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Video Comments:
simonesimone2 (November 21, 2008 at 7:03 pm)
haaaaaaaaaaa!!
philosoisgrt (November 19, 2008 at 3:32 pm)
Lol good clip
kidkitna (November 17, 2008 at 7:58 pm)
I'm not gunna get into the mix of arguing about why people should like Kant's ethics as I just read Critique of Practical Reason and have read his metaphysics of knowledge. All I'm going to say is that I love Nietzsche and you really can't like both of them!
lostm0ments (November 16, 2008 at 10:12 pm)
Kant was a genius. If you fail to understand his logic, it does not mean your ill-minded in any manner or form. Only that you require more cognitive thought.
Fushapan (November 8, 2008 at 6:06 pm)
Many of the errors metaphysicians make, says Kant, is because people conflate phenomenon with noumenon.
1) Substance is a simple object that cannot be reduced to others
2) The Ego is a simple object of experience/thought
3) The Ego is a substance (spirit)

The error is we confuse with how we appear with how we are in-itself, so the argument is fallacious (says Kant).
ralph435z (November 6, 2008 at 5:33 am)
The distinction is between things as they are for us, and things as they are in abstraction of all possible experience.

So, who believes that there can be a real which is outside of any possible experience? What does it mean for something to be real?

I think calling the noumenal "reality" is just importing pre-critical metaphysics of substance into Kant, which misses the entire point.

What it means for the noumenal to be regulative is that we can no longer say its existence is "reality".
Fushapan (November 8, 2008 at 6:03 pm)
Noumenon is an idea to keep a critical check on us, to make sure we don't confuse what we bring to experience with actual things in the world (space, time, natural laws).
RageAndLove1 (November 4, 2008 at 10:09 am)
hehe Nietzsche wins
ralph435z (November 3, 2008 at 11:40 pm)
Reality for Kant is phenomenal. Noumenal "reality" isn't reality at all, although it can for practical purposes (in ethics).

A maxim can't be universal - a maxim is a subjective principle. A principle of action, when it holds for all rational wills, is not a maxim but a law.
Fushapan (November 6, 2008 at 1:32 am)
No, phenomenon is the reality manifested in our sensibilities and shaped by the Categories of the understanding. Noumenon is reality-in-itself, however it serves merely as an idea b/c we cannot ever access it (we lack intellectual intuition).

Kant makes it clear he is not an Idealist. He makes this distinction between things as they appear for us and things-in-themselves.

One can see in Kant's transcendental arguments for the Ideality of space/time that objects do not originate from us.