S
Sarpedon
Guest
Because he is talking to something, even if he doesn’t know what he is talking too. That’s Descartes’ point- he can know that he is perceiving with absolute certainty, but he doesn’t necessarily know what he is perceiving.Well, as you know many people “say” many things. If anyone would tell me, that I am just a figment of his imaginatoin, that I am not “real”, then I would ask him (only for the fun of it, not seriously) that why does he bother to talk into thin air - since there is no one to talk to.
There is a huge distinction between action and knowledge. The eastern philosopher can act in accordance with the world while not claiming to have any true knowledge of what the world is, or even acting in accordance with the illusion even though he views it as not true. They would not consider your response satisfactory- for how can you prove that we know truth just because we act a certain way? You have not established that those two things are the same or how they are related.However, it goes a bit deeper. That solipsist (or follower of some Eastern philosphy) will invalidate his own assertion by violating it with his actions. He will take some illusionary food from this illusionary external “non-reality” and he will breathe the illusionary “non-air”. He can try to hold his breath, but his own body (and hopefully he does not believe that his own body is also an illusion) will override his desire, and he will draw in a huge gasp of this illusionary “non-air”. When it comes to words and actions, actions speak much louder than words.
You are taking Descartes out of context. Descartes said that he can know his own existence as a perceiving being with certainty, but that such certainty does not extend to the object of his perception (the rest of his philosophy attempts to connect those dots). To say “I am perceiving” is not the same as saying “what I perceive is true.”We are back to square one. I am maintaining that the external world is real, and the “proof” is that I exist. One cannot doubt his own existence - the “cogito ergo sum” is a wonderful way to put that. If one maintains that the external world is just an illusion, then he can adhere to his view - and die due to asphyxiation, or he can deny it by breathing. So simple.
Not easily. Gilson’s book is a simplified presentation. Intelligibility of being per Gilson in short means that we have the intuition of being as something knowable (intelligible) before we have any specific knowledge of that being in the particular. Therefore, we should not ground our epistemology in any particular (differentiated) thing, but rather in terms of the being we grasp as something without differentiation. This obviously draws on the notions of particularity and universality, which is a major topic. In practical terms this means we should be open to different ways of experiencing that being in particular form, such as science, art, history, logic, literature, traditional philosophy, etc. I really cannot express this more simply here without writing an essay myself. I’d urge you to read Gilson, for he explains this stuff better than I can. In addition to his actual constructive argument (which is in the last chapter), he also goes over the history of philosophy from the middle ages onwards, which in particular (no pun intended!) explains particularity and universality very well. It’s also an enjoyable read, and I finished it in a week.Short of reading his book, can you point me to some source which just explains the phrase of “intelligibility of being”? Just what does this phrase mean? I have no idea.
Have a nice time!Just a short remark. Tomorrow I am leaving for a nice, long cruise trip, and I will not be able to see your reply, and will not be able to respond. I will be back at the end of the month.