Kant and Causality: An Introduction to the Transcendental Deduction

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  • čas přidán 11. 06. 2020
  • The long-awaited final video (or is it!?) of my series on causality in 18th-century philosophy, featuring Kant's wacky Copernican revolution, his solution to the problems posed by Hume which we saw in our last video.
    Think his solution is too wacky? Let's see you come up with a better one!

Komentáře • 85

  • @terrancewatts1123
    @terrancewatts1123 Před 3 lety +85

    This is the most underrated video in existance.

    • @ed4282
      @ed4282  Před 3 lety +12

      Haha! I doubt it, but thanks for the encouragement; it makes me want to find the time to make more of these.

    • @pikiwiki
      @pikiwiki Před rokem +3

      this comment is underrated

    • @rankya9854
      @rankya9854 Před rokem +1

      @@pikiwiki No. This comment is underrated

  • @LTDsaint15
    @LTDsaint15 Před 3 dny

    I continue to come back to this video even years later. Thank you very much for providing this! I can’t thank you enough sir.

  • @justasimplemathematicallye3917
    @justasimplemathematicallye3917 Před 2 měsíci +4

    This really IS the most underrated video in existence

  • @fallenangel8785
    @fallenangel8785 Před 5 měsíci +4

    The most underrated channel in history

  • @damaplehound
    @damaplehound Před měsícem +1

    HOLY, as a philosphy student who is taking epistemology classes right now and started reading Kant for the very first time, I can't stress enough how helpful this video is in understanding the material. I've been having trouble understanding how Kant could argue that space and time are purely mental. Great video overall.

  • @chanchomovil
    @chanchomovil Před rokem +7

    I have enjoyed this video a thousand times, each time I have learned something new to me. It is amazing how many concepts can be condensed in so little time!

  • @wiltshire6493
    @wiltshire6493 Před rokem +7

    Ed - we need more videos from you. Please try to find the time to create more. These are amazing

  • @mattstephens343
    @mattstephens343 Před rokem +13

    Without a doubt a fantastic video. Kant is hard enough to understand, videos certainly mkae his works intelligible.

  • @alecburger1856
    @alecburger1856 Před rokem +2

    never written a comment before on CZcams but this demands an exception; absolutely brilliant explanation that finally put all these complex ideas together in a coherent way. Thank you. Keep it up.

  • @nautiplexriftscrubler8979
    @nautiplexriftscrubler8979 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I struggle to put into words how helpful this is. What a great explanation. So much secondary literature on transcendental deduction either just refers back to the critique of pure reason or mimics its confusing vocabulary. I finally got it. I think....

  • @DSAK55
    @DSAK55 Před měsícem

    Kant fails Wittgenstein's test: “Philosophy is a battle against the bewitchment of our intelligence by means of language.”

  • @erik8719
    @erik8719 Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you. This video and Humes video helped me out so much. I was having trouble understanding how Kant came up with his Categorical Imperative. To understand how, I had to understand his metaphysics. To understand his metaphysics I had to learn about Hume and his understanding of causation and necessity. Your videos helped immensely. Thanks again.

    • @adaptercrash
      @adaptercrash Před rokem

      That means universal law is not innate in autistic mind and they have a get your own rules which end up being illegal regulations that bypas the criminal code. Not that great, it's a posterior imperative and was processed.

  • @DavidLydonTV
    @DavidLydonTV Před rokem +3

    I'm reading the transcendental deduction and secondary material for a class. This helps a lot, thanks.

    • @ed4282
      @ed4282  Před 9 měsíci

      Thanks for taking the time to comment!

  • @Wambutto
    @Wambutto Před rokem

    Please make more videos. I love these videos and i have watched them several times in the last two years.

  • @theale8821
    @theale8821 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you! Very easy to understand, good supplement to my class on perceptions and reality

  • @chanchomovil
    @chanchomovil Před 2 lety +2

    That was great. I owe you so much. Keep up with the good work..!!!

  • @mileskeller5244
    @mileskeller5244 Před rokem +2

    Nicely done man. You obviously put a lot of work into this.

  • @therealmorty4403
    @therealmorty4403 Před rokem +1

    Finding fleshed out categories is Impossible! Awesome...

  • @roygbiv176
    @roygbiv176 Před rokem +1

    This was a really good explanation of Kant. Thanks a lot ! 🙏

  • @nowheretobefound4431
    @nowheretobefound4431 Před rokem +1

    good work, keep going with these, they're fun and make learning difficult stuff easier

  • @vlad_o_sh
    @vlad_o_sh Před 8 měsíci

    Thanks for the video Ed. Appreciate your effort.

  • @RobWickline
    @RobWickline Před rokem

    lol i really appreciate that you have a cartoon version of the picture of kant's head leaning to that one side you always see on all things regarding kant

  • @radwanparvez
    @radwanparvez Před rokem

    This is the most underrated video in existence (2).

  • @se7964
    @se7964 Před měsícem

    Awesome video, awesome explanation, awesome visuals and music. Now do Hegel.

  • @Aditi-dy7gp
    @Aditi-dy7gp Před 4 měsíci

    Amazing, amazing explanation !!!!

  • @formerlyorange
    @formerlyorange Před 8 měsíci

    This was awesome!

  • @morbiusprime2043
    @morbiusprime2043 Před 9 měsíci +1

    This video is a masterpiece

  • @arangharibpour2014
    @arangharibpour2014 Před 2 lety +2

    This is very good. Well done.

    • @ed4282
      @ed4282  Před 2 lety +2

      Always nice to get a compliment from an academic. (Sorry, I googled you)

  • @radwanparvez
    @radwanparvez Před rokem

    I wrote 5 pages of conversations that arose in my mind to "Understand" the "Givens" in this video.
    Some grammatical error in the subtitle gave me hard time.
    Great job man.

  • @AndreasFroestl97
    @AndreasFroestl97 Před 2 lety

    amazing content!

  • @siyili1940
    @siyili1940 Před 2 lety

    Thanks! This really helped

  • @user-nh9nt2rk6s
    @user-nh9nt2rk6s Před 2 lety +3

    wonderful video thanks too much to you

    • @ed4282
      @ed4282  Před 2 lety

      You are very welcome! I hope that I'll have the time to post more, one day.

  • @phpn99
    @phpn99 Před 11 měsíci

    In fact, it boils down to the idea that the concept of "judgment" itself, IS consciousness. Its modalities are interesting insofar as they hint at the a priori dimensions of semantics (i.e. 'meaning') in our psyche (i.e. 'understanding'). Quantity, Quality, Relation and Modality are these dimensions, as postulated by Kant, but other philosophers have made overlapping yet somewhat different models. Aristotle's Categories being a prime example. At any rate the concept of 'categories' simply mean "the cognitive metrics of judgment". Time is not a product of our minds - time is understood by our minds. The distinction is tautological.

  • @TrolleningIshraq
    @TrolleningIshraq Před rokem +1

    I love your cartoon of Kant's profile

  • @reflectingplusplus
    @reflectingplusplus Před 2 lety +1

    Bravo 👏

  • @kallianpublico7517
    @kallianpublico7517 Před 5 měsíci

    Hume's argument was that through empirical investigation there was no such thing as causation. Causation he reasoned must show a "necessary conection" between on thing and another thing in an event. There was no such "connection" to be found using the senses. The only thing to be found was a "constant conjunction". A consistency in the behavior of objects in Nature without the observation of a "force", or some other agent, controlling or connecting these objects.
    Kant is asserting that this fact that Hume uses to banish causation, cannot be "understood" by means of the sensibility but only by means of the subconscious categories of the mind. By the category of relation in its psychological "insistence" of causation.
    Kant agrees with Hume that causation is not to be found by means of the senses: empiricism; but Kant disagrees with Hume that causation is therefore not scientific. Kant "believes" that he has discovered the true source of science. It is not to be found in empiricism; it is to be found in the conscious and subconscious categories and judgements of the understanding.
    Experience and empiricism merely confirm what is already there in the human mind. Time and space are not to be found in clocks and rulers, or the outside world, but in the human psyche.

  • @andrewrae8064
    @andrewrae8064 Před 2 měsíci

    Ok now this is epic

  • @thewesterncapegardener
    @thewesterncapegardener Před 2 lety +2

    Perhaps a better title for the video will allow more people to see it and gain an understanding of Kant's views (kinda like I have thanks to you), otherwise, very helpful illustrations and explanations!

    • @ed4282
      @ed4282  Před 2 lety +2

      That's a great idea. Thanks for the feedback!

    • @salaaghuddeenjacobs
      @salaaghuddeenjacobs Před 2 lety +1

      @@ed4282 The title is much more fitting and I even clicked on the video again after I saw the new title, thinking that I hadn't seen it before. Hopefully your videos will reach and help more people!

  • @trippytmoloi40
    @trippytmoloi40 Před rokem

    brow we need more videos of kant from you

  • @grantbartley483
    @grantbartley483 Před 5 měsíci

    I wouldn't equate the subconscious with the TE. The nonconscious workings of the brain are mechanical rather than lead by logic. But modern people might say that these mechanisms set up the categories for experience.

  • @AbrarManzoor
    @AbrarManzoor Před rokem +2

    Why u r not uploading videos anymore?

    • @ed4282
      @ed4282  Před rokem +2

      I'm pursuing a PhD and am not finding the time to do so. I hope I will e able to come back to it soon.

  • @ceoofbrunestud5894
    @ceoofbrunestud5894 Před 2 lety +3

    this is underrated

    • @ed4282
      @ed4282  Před 2 lety

      Thanks! I'm glad you liked it.

  • @tix.
    @tix. Před 7 měsíci

    impressive video

  • @cordeliax8972
    @cordeliax8972 Před rokem +1

    there’s definitely a chance you have just saved my degree

    • @ed4282
      @ed4282  Před rokem +1

      I am very happy to hear that this helped you!

  • @Google_Censored_Commenter

    It's a shame Kant never questioned his own framework. He simply assumed that the categories must be fixed, and couldn't possibly change over time. He also didn't really succeed in making it "objective", if by objective we mean experience independent. Sure, he added a subonscious that acts on the sensory data before it arises in experience, but this doesn't really make it "objective" in a truly independent sense we want. It makes it subconscious dependent instead. Which is no better.

  • @grantbartley483
    @grantbartley483 Před 5 měsíci

    Cause must be in the noumenal if the noumenal causes the phenomenal, which must be the case.

  • @ashtonmeyer1580
    @ashtonmeyer1580 Před rokem

    This was somewhat helpful

  • @sinusoidalsilhouette510

    Nice video-but I believe it is intuitions that do the combining of givens, not the understanding, although perhaps it might depend on which combining you are talking about.

    • @ZalmanGreenberg
      @ZalmanGreenberg Před 11 měsíci

      i was thinking the same thing can you explain to me the difference

  • @idegteke
    @idegteke Před 4 měsíci

    Our intelligence, using consciousness, learns from the very nature that contains and forms it. I’ll make this eternal circular word salad to be the first philosophical sentence that was modelled with an actual C++ code. Run your idea, basically:) We will see where this idea leaks, at the very least.

  • @hadihassan372
    @hadihassan372 Před 2 lety +2

    Wow

  • @mithunbalaji8199
    @mithunbalaji8199 Před 6 měsíci

    🤯

  • @philosophyindepth.3696

    Why u discontinued youtube?

    • @ed4282
      @ed4282  Před rokem

      Life got in the way, you know how it is. Pursuing a PhD.

  • @6ixthhydro652
    @6ixthhydro652 Před rokem

    Hi Ed

  • @kallianpublico7517
    @kallianpublico7517 Před měsícem

    The "necessary conditions of human understanding" were, for Kant, the a priori unconscious categories. This is like saying that the brain is the source of consciousness.
    That "whatever" is out there in Nature: the "thing in itself", cannot be known in entirety: completely. That our brain proscribes us from such knowledge. Kant doesn't mean that there is no Natural world outside the brain; only that the understanding, given by the brain, filters Nature according to the subconscious categories. The understanding proscribes consciousness from complete knowledge. Science is incomplete.
    This is a complete inversion of Hume's view. For Hume observation confirms science. For Kant the subconscious categories informs science and is confirmed by consciousness: science (the understanding) prescribes the incompleteness of consciousness.
    Complete consciousness is prevented from being revealed by the understanding. What is revealed by the sensibilities is prescribed by the conscious judgements.
    Kant's view is that the linguistic mind is prior to consciousness: that consciousness is dependent on the linguistic mind or that there is no consciousness without the linguistic mind.
    According to this view a baby's brain 🧠 would have to posess language. Is that what is found? No. Baby's have no language, language must be taught. The categories and judgements must be learned. But babies have consciousness.
    Kant's view is a premonition of neuroscience. Which, to this day, has not solved the hard problem of consciousness.
    The "self" of the understanding eludes science.

  • @jacobslagle2734
    @jacobslagle2734 Před měsícem

    How is this not just an argument saying that cause and effect are purely cognitive phenomenon

  • @benquinneyiii7941
    @benquinneyiii7941 Před 3 měsíci

    The absolute

  • @cowextremeawesomenesss5775

    So Kant didn't actually solve the problem that causality is a human invention? He just created a different framework to explain it?
    And if you want yet another question, where do emotions play a role in this model?

    • @ed4282
      @ed4282  Před 3 lety

      Kant does not cast it as a human invention; an invention would imply an intention. Instead, while causality is contributed to experience via our cognitive faculties , we should understand that the objects of experience arises in consciousness *already* subsumed under these concepts. We do not have control over the process by which this happens (as we would if it were an invention).
      As far as I am aware, emotions play no role in this model.

    • @atanzhang2582
      @atanzhang2582 Před 3 lety

      @@ed4282 Great video and very entertaining to watch! So Kant basically moves the understanding under subconsciousness in order that we have no control over it. But does Hume really say that we can arbitrarily formulate the causal relationship? Maybe Hume would agree with Kant that causations are not out there, but within us.

  • @phpn99
    @phpn99 Před 11 měsíci

    It's not "Can't", it's "Kaunt" - German isn't hard to pronounce.

    • @ed4282
      @ed4282  Před 9 měsíci

      You're absolutely right.

  • @Josh-fj9hi
    @Josh-fj9hi Před 2 lety

    It's pronunced like Kaunt otherwise good video

    • @ed4282
      @ed4282  Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah... my prof who is a big name in Kantian scholarship always pronounced it like you pronounce "can't". Then again, she pronounces tomato as "tomato," so what'choo gonna do.

  • @shadenhs8197
    @shadenhs8197 Před 6 měsíci

    good video but background music was so distracting and unnecessary

    • @se7964
      @se7964 Před měsícem

      Disagree. I loved the background music, helped with the atmosphere and mood

  • @bluesky45299
    @bluesky45299 Před 26 dny

    Quran says: “Allah:there is no deity worthy of worship except he”:The Neccessary life/consciousness,sustainer of life/consciousness.” Wire like neuronal structures that conduct electricity via ions/neurotransmitters in the CNS/PNS possess no attribute of thinking/life and yet that has “randomly” led to life. Consciousness/thinking is an innate idea(“Fitra”)that is distinct from carbon skeleton and yet the materialist scientist believes that chemistry turned into biology via “god of randomness”/”Emergent property”/”law of nature”. Consciousness can only stem from Necessary Consciousness (Allah-one/indivisible/loving/self-sufficient infinite perfection.

  • @bobs2809
    @bobs2809 Před 17 dny

    But please lets lets pronounce his name correctly.

  • @ZalmanGreenberg
    @ZalmanGreenberg Před 11 měsíci

    ok good explanation but you have to stop with the excessively weird animations such as your intro it almost made me leave immediately as well as the Hume face rotating around with his mouth opened for like 10sec

  • @Abc-rx6tj
    @Abc-rx6tj Před měsícem +1

    Reported this time wasting nonsense

    • @ed4282
      @ed4282  Před měsícem

      Looking back, I do agree that I present a highly fantastical interpretation of Kant. But I leave it uploaded in case it inspires people to study philosophy.