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“Obama exists” would be trivially true for Kant??? Anyway, you seem to agree that “is” has a predicative role here, but that YOU are doing the POSITING must obviously be understood in the context of *the world *that is the a posteriori condition of your positing. You are only positing insofar as the world shows (or presents/has presented) itself to you as something that you *can *posit (or re-present).“Is” is peforming the role of predicating a property of an object. But I am doing the positing of the existence of that object by predicating a property to it. This is precisely why the judgment “Obama exists” would be trivially true for Kant.
Absolutely. They are different notions. But I wouldn’t be predicating without also positing that that object exists about which I pass a judgment. This is exactly the whole point of my entire discussion!
??? I don’t follow your reasoning.Therefore, “existence” is implicitly univocal every time I make a judgment whether about Hamlet or Obama. So there is nothing informative about “existence” at all.
Kant reserves to the reader the right to understand an author better than that author understood himself. I therefore feel free to take liberties with Kant’s own interpretation of Erfahrung so as to understand die Sache selbst, the subject at hand.
I read the central Kantian idea of a thing that possibly exists as being a thing that is the possible object of an Experience (Erfahrung), not just an Erlebnis (a kind of isolated experience that is not conceptually integrated into our complete view of the world by our faculty of understanding). I think that **literary experience **is a genuinely possible kind of Erfahrung. It is not at all the same as speaking about “nothing,” i.e., that which does not exist simpliciter. The concept of a possible King of Denmark or a literary King of Denmark contains no more nor less than that of an actual King of Denmark, but literary positing and the a posteriori grasping of the positing is one *way *of positing an object (Gegenstand) in itself - it is not a merely possible (“purely conceptual”) mode of existence. That is why true and false things may be said about Hamlet, no less than about Obama.
Kant, Akademieausgabe III, *Kritik der reinen Vernunft *… , Seite 402:
“Denn durch den Begriff wird der Gegenstand nur mit den allgemeinen Bedingungen einer möglichen empirischen Erkenntniß überhaupt als einstimmig, durch die Existenz aber als in dem Context der gesammten Erfahrung enthalten gedacht.”
(For through the concept, the object only comes to be in agreement with the general conditions of a possible empirical piece-of-knowledge in general; but through Existence, it comes to be thought as included in the context of the totality of Experience.)
As Hegel points out, being is not not-being. I don’t know if it will make a difference to you, but maybe it helps to think about the possibility of there being different ways of emerging from nothingness. We can conceive these different ways as a *result *of different things having different natures, but I don’t see how that gets us anywhere. Why should ‘having a nature’ be more primitive than ‘existing’ or ‘emerging from nothingness’? Anyway, according to Aristotle (Met. Bk.VII), isn’t it fair to say that ‘nature’ or ti estin just is what we *primarily *refer to when we talk about being (to on, ousia)? So how is talk about different natures different from talk about different ways of existing?