It was a joke, but I actually didn’t know that ‘raw materials’ was supposed to mean ‘thing.’ I think this is not at all a clear use of terms. Do you disagree?
As a slogan “The thing precedes the concept” sounds a lot better than “Any number of things precede the concept that combines them”. But the latter is more accurate to my position. I do have some doubts about even this slogan, as I think I’ve said. It’s possible enough that we are born with certain latent ideas, or certain mental structures (almost categories) that are preconditions to forming ideas.
In a sense, they do exist.
I don’t dispute that concepts have a kind of existence. Otherwise, we could not talk about
them.
But let’s not dwell on that; you’re missing what I suspect is the more important question: The notion of ‘derived from raw unicorn materials’ is derived from what ‘raw materials’?
Well, “materials” is a fully empirical notion, I would expect; we notice things being made of other things, so we construct concepts that are made of other concepts. We are mimicking the world. Of course, you may then ask from what raw materials I derive the idea of “being made from other things”. This is something like the question of epistemically basic beliefs. Where does the series of questions end? Nowhere, it appears, and yet it must end.
But what’s the point to the questioning? Is a series of questions really to be taken as a refutation of empiricism? Is that your goal? If so, I think it’s an unachievable goal.
Going back to our unicorn, I suspect that “derivation” isn’t fully acquired from the world, but based on some sort of conditional category that human beings are “born with” – this is, I take it, what Kant was getting at.
I disagree. I suppose I must ask what you mean by ‘informative.’
To be informative, a definition must tell me something I don’t know. Thus, informative definitions always start from finger-pointing (*that *thing over there), and then tell us something we didn’t know about the thing. Saying that a “thing” is self-identical was already presupposed by the usage of the word “thing”.
One bit of puzzlement: wouldn’t I learn something about unicorns, if I looked “unicorn” up in an encyclopedia? Yes, it seems, I would. But how can you “point” to a unicorn? Easy. You point to the (cultural/linguistic) concept, which has a kind of existence. Then you can learn things about that.
How do we manage to point to the right concept? This is a DEEP question, perhaps the deepest question in linguistic philosophy.
But what, pray tell, does all this have to do with the ontological argument?
