Unfortunately I wasn’t able to attend any of the seminars for Theme 1. Therefore this blogpost will be longer than the normal word criteria. I will reflect about how I have contributed to this week’s theme, basically what I’ve learned and how I’ve learned it.
So, the last time I had an philosophical assignment like this one was probably in high school. I’m 23 years old and as you might have guessed it, it’s been awhile since high school. I had to go through a lot of hours of procrastination until I was finally able to start this assignment. Looking at the amount of pages I was supposed to read in a short amount of time was a bit fearsome since I’m not a frequent reader. I decided to start with Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason. I found this text to be very hard and complex to understand. The sentences were built on difficult words and if an example was made to clarify something it only made it more confusing. I only read it once and quickly came to understand that reading the whole thing again wasn’t going to help at all. And also I didn’t have the time to do so. Kant basically destroyed my already low confident of my ability to read. I know now that I should have started with Plato’s, comparing to Kant his choice of words and writing was much easier to understand. I felt that following the dialogue between Socrates and Theaetetus was more reasonable than just having someone explaining everything directly.
While I was reading both of the text, I was also looking at the questions that were supposed to be answered for the first assignment. I experienced it to be difficult answering the questions on Kant’s text. Therefore I decided to turn to the cyberbank of knowledge which we refer to as the Internet.
There are a lot of detailed summaries of the Critique of Pure Reason with an easier language which cleared up many questions that I had. I also watched videos on YouTube where they explain Kant’s point of view regarding the questions given to us with really good explanations visually that I could relate to and understand. By doing this I managed to answer the questions without really having fully understood the meaning of any of texts. I would strongly recommend this to other students.
Something I have learned during this theme is this quote that was mentioned by the lecturer made by Kant, who says:
“Perception without conception, is blind.
Conception without perception is empty.”
This quote is really a great summary of what Plato also was saying by that, we only see and hear through our senses and not with them. I understood what Plato meant when answering the question for the Pre blog posting. But I also found Kant’s quote to make it clear for me that it is only when we put the senses in a concept that it gets a meaning.
During the later part of the class were the lecturer talked about Kant and some important terminology it started getting really confusing. I understood the difference of a priori and a posteriori very well before the class, but it made even more sense after the class. I especially found that the difference between synthetic and analytic judgements was well explained with this example by the lecturer:
If I say there are students in a classroom it is a priori analytic knowledge. But if I were to say there are 39 students in a classroom that would suddenly become a posteriori synthetic judgement since there is no way I could have had the precise knowledge of how many students there are in the classroom without having first experienced the situation and counted the students. So the analytic sentences are just something we know without some further investigation of it being true or not.
Through the rest of the class I felt that we moved too fast from one terminology to another, therefore I never managed to make much sense of what the meaning of each words were. An example are Kant’s categories. I perceived it being categories, as faculties of knowledge, which objects needs to conform to. But I’m not quite sure how something could be split up into those categories. And what each of the categories meant. The lecturer made the example of seeing a tree. And then circled the categories which were the ones making the object a tree to us. It all went a little bit too fast for me, and got me a bit confused during the class. This was a question I wanted to bring up during the seminar, but since I couldn’t attend I looked it up myself and found this very good example making it more understandable. Since it is hard for me to understand things when I am not given an example I can relate to I found this image to be very easy to understand. On the image below you see how our thinking process during a shot when playing pool looks like split up into Kant’s categories.
Kant's thinking cap illustrated by Ralph Edney for the book Philosophy for Beginners, 1992, by Richard Osborne, p. 104.
Another question I wanted to bring up during the seminar was that as I perceived it, Kant does not acknowledge the existence of a God but he doesn’t either ignore it. The lecturer mentioned this during the class, but it didn’t really come through to me what Kant’s reasoning is on this matter. My thoughts have been that it has to be seen as that if you can prove an existence of something then the thing is real, and if you can not prove the non-existence of it then you can not say it does not exist. I’m also, since before, familiar with Kant’s quote:
“The starry heavens above me and the moral law within me.”
I never quite understood the meaning entirely but I presume now that Kant means that what is above him (or his knowledge) he can not do or say anything truthful of, but of the things that are in his head, his knowledge, of that he can make a truthful perception. It would have been fun to know if this question was discussed during the seminar and what other students opinion were on this subject.
After having talked to some classmates that attended the seminar, I think I would have gained some clarity by being there. Many felt that the seminar were the best part of this theme.
I felt that this theme was pretty good for starting to think about how and why we perceive the world as we do and also what ways are there are to think regarding the issues.
Hey Isabella!
SvaraRaderaI guess if you confirm something, it means you take it as true. If you think it is true you confirm it might be true. Moreover, I am not sure that copernicus had problem understanding “celestial motions.” He simply used that example to clarify his position to others and make it understandable to them.
I agree with the final point in which you say “Socrates argument directed towards the modern empiricism.” I think you have rounded your reflection up very succinctly and coherently.
The other text-post lecture- is very well-written. Despite the fact that you were unable to attend any of the seminars, you have done a great job. There’s a great deal of improvement , if one compares your pre and post lecture reflections.
I'm sorry that you could not attend the seminar last week.Definitely,you've done much work on trying to understand the recommended literature.It's pretty usefull to use some illustration inessay.As you illustrated ,I can easily figure out what stucture Kant used.
SvaraRaderaI agree with summaries and videos being great techniques to sort of crack the surface of the understanding of dense material of this sort. In mathematics we have proofs of every presented concept. We can trust they are undeniably true, since it's made evident by the proof itself being presented in the literature. In these kind of courses however, we're often left wondering about the significance of what we learn. Here's some person and here's some theory the person wrote 300 years ago. We don't know why we're reading it, if the field it claims to belong to is a respected field of anything, if it's still relevant today or wether this work bears any significance compared to the numerous contradicting works we must assume always will exist since these disciplines don't deal with definite answers.
SvaraRadera"Since the early days of it's inception, this delicious art has become a science with the kind of strict rules of preparation only usually found in university biology departments […]". This is a quote by Professor Assad Khan, founding Bubbleologist, explaining his 2005 theory of teavolution, which is the most prevalent theory within the field of Bubbleology. What is the significance of this? None at all – "Bubbleology" is a British chain of chemistry-themed bars which sell taiwanese tea-based drinks known as bubble tea, and the above is just something they wrote on their novelty website.
But even doing simple searches on Wikipedia can make it clearer. E.g. when searching for "kant categories", we'll find an article called "Category (Kant)". That title alone tells us that the categories are not some universal fact of philosophy, but a specific notion proposed by Kant. Reading on about Kant, we'll find out that he however has been very influential on all philosophy, etc.
Its really interesting how sometimes you learn things in the seminars that you haven't learned during the week that wasn't even part of the assignment. Like synthetic and analytic judgement in your case. I also think that it's a good way to study not only reading the course literature but also looking at other sources of information to maybe give a more simplified view or just give another perspective on the matter.
SvaraRaderaI think that your text is very well written and structure. It definitely makes up for the fact that you couldn't attend the seminar in my opinion. Well done! :)
you are not alone about thinking that the texts were hard to understand, and as you say going to the seminar helped a great deal. But with that said i still thin that you managed to write a good refection about this weeks theme. One of your question you had about what the lecturer meant by his trees example was one I had as well, but i must say that you managed to find the answer better than me.This picture you found is really good and easy to understand. I also like your refection about Kant and the question of God, it was something my group discussed during the seminar and i found interesting.
SvaraRadera