L
levinas12
Guest
How do you know that you are receiving stimuli from the outside world if your direct knowledge is only of your interior world? Why can’t your interior world be coherent and consistent without there being an external world? Hume would ask Kant: “How do you know that there are noumena?” Hume would agree that there is order among the internal impressions/ideas but this doesn’t lead him to posit noumena.We know there is an extramental world because we are constantly receiving stimuli we cannot ignore.
It may be unpalatable but the fact is that we have direct knowledge only of our interior world. Just as we cannot get into another person’s mind we cannot get into a thing’s substance, essence, call it what you will - that to which its qualities belong. Kant was right in distinguishing between the noumenon and phenomenon as a counterblast to Hume’s “bundles of perceptions”, i.e. phenomenalism.
You seem to equate phenomena with noumena as if they are indistinguishable! Is a thing the sum of its qualities - or something more? It cannot exist without its qualities nor can its qualities exist without the possessor of those qualities. This is even more evident in the case of a person. Are you nothing more than the sum of your qualities? If so which quality enables you to make your decisions?
Once you have a split between phenomenon and noumenon, you destabilize truth. You can never find out what’s going on. You can’t put Humpty-Dumpty back together again. That’s why I’m saying Being discloses itself to us as it is in itself - and it does this through “interested” perception - there is no hidden inaccessible noumenal dimension.