I understand your distinction, but (B) is false, unless you think logical and mathematical truths are contingent a posteriori.
Sure. Statements are contingent on minds. Truths – especially analytic truths – are dependent on minds. No definitions without minds, right?
If you think that “2+2=4” is a statement about the world, I again will point out confusion between maps and territories.
Further, I don’t know what you mean by “empirical analysis.” Analysis in any form is purely a logical enterpise consisting of the categorical deconstruction from wholes to parts, grouping similarities together, and finding pattens with the use of inference rules and quantification.
Analysis based on what’s observed. Empiricism is not simply observation. Reasoning gets applied to form the analystic basis for models that perform (or don’t perform).
I understand the both of you want to expand “experience” to include non-sensory experience–and people talk this way colloquially. But what’s the point?
I shouldn’t even pretend to speak for Leela, so I will say just for myself that “non-sensory experience” is a “square circle” term. It’s internally conflicted. Sense is that “that which yields experience”, and “experience is that which we gain through our senses”. That’s what I meant about Leela’s possible (A) claim, based on the tautology of sense and experience.
The point of that would be utility in classification. We use “senses” as a semantic bucket in which to point to those streams of signals, symbols or stimuli that affect our cognition. If we discovered some new human faculty to detect a newly discovered form of radiation, that would be a “sixth sense”. We wouldn’t exclude it because it wasn’t part of the “classic senses”. It’s a sense because it provides novel (name removed by moderator)ut to the brain, (name removed by moderator)ut the brain can process in some way, and possible act on.
That’s right in line with my understanding of Leela’s (and my) tautology. There is a point in such usage – it carries valuable semantic freight.
For sake of precision and clarity in our discussions, we will have to maintain the original distinction between sensory and non-sensory since emprical experience only presents a wealth of a posteriori contingencies, whereas logical truths are necessary a priori. So I don’t sympathize with this move at all.
No logical truths are necessary
a priori, so far as I’m aware. That does not mean logical principles are not
actual, taking stock of our senses and experiences. Manifestly, some logical principles obtain – that which enables effective communication in a post like this, for example. But that a transcendental dependency, but that should not be mistaken for a necessary truth, metaphysically.
The universe might have been otherwise, for all we know, or might not have been at all. We do not have, and cannot have, any means of qualifying such a necessity *a priori. *Being
actual does not entail necessity across all (logically) possible worlds.
I light of that, I think that distinction isn’t needed, the special pleading for the necessity of logical truths. It’s necessary in a transcendental sense that sufficient logical properties obtain such that we can communicate, etc., but it might have been otherwise for all we know. That’s important, as the criterion for a logically necessary truth – must obtain in all possible worlds – reduces the set of such necessities to tautologies, trivially true statements which are incoherent or contradictory if negated. In some logically possible world, no intelligibility, or even any context
for logic, would exist.
See Quine’s dismissal of the analytic/sythetic distinction based on the “unempirical article of faith” that is this commitment to
a priori necessities.
-TS