Math, asked by holimann, 7 months ago

The Kantian premise is that objective reality is a messy, chaotic, unwieldy and unknowable thing-in-itself; because it does not follow the pristine precincts of good old commonsense, causality, formal logic and the notions of rationality that have been developed by philosophers starting from the early Greeks. The only thing man can do (Kant posited) is to use his sense perceptions, experimental data, his thought, imagination, fantasy or whatever subjective data he can gather about the objective reality to get on with life. What man at best can do, is to organize this data through his subjective thought, mental tools, logical schemata, mathematical (geometrical, algebraic, symmetry) structures and representations, logical categories, theories etc. to get as much of an “understanding” of objective reality as possible, to deal with it comfortably! A good theory is the one that can cover as much of this data, as well as future possible ones (predictability). This is what is historically known as scholasticism - an endless debate to justify one's subjective choice from various theories; but there is no way to judge who is right, except the power of individual’s proficiency in debating skills!

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