Saturday, February 9, 2019
The Critique of Conceiving Logic as a Propadeutic :: Logic Ontology Philosophy Essays
The Critique of Conceiving Logic as a Propadeutic initiation Does system of logical systemal systemal system assume an ontology? What is the relationship between logic and ontology? In contemporary philosophy common answers have been No to the commencement exercise and None to the succor question. This is because the principles of logic, to borrow Kantian terminology, are understood as regulative quite than constitutive of objects. For a principle to be regulative means that it provides us with a methodology that belongs somehow to the nature of our thinking, but not to that of the world, as constitutive principles do.i In this way, a regulative conception of logic represents logic as an instrument of reason that takes for granted a formal make of rules, rules which have no bearing on reality and that are invented as tools to guide our thought.ii It is no curiosity that as a result roughly contemporary logic text-books present logic as formal or informal system of rules meant to regulate our thinking. But why should we presuppose that logic is a regulative instrument devoid of ontological status? The take up here is to show that this presupposition regarding the nature of logic has very tenuous railyard and that a more than plausible conception is a constitutive one, where logic is seen to express the structure of the world as mathematics might. This will be argued first by articulating Kants arguments for the separation of logic and ontology based on his criticism of pure reason and logic as providing principles constitutive of objects. Next, a Hegelian criticism of this criticism will be provided, as a defence of pure reason, to present subsequently his conception of reason and logic as the fountain of constitutive principles. This will be attempted by showing (a) Hegels conception of logic, (b) of thought, and (c) of objective thought. Finally, this position will be challenged with the charge of psychologism to show that nonetheless an ontological view of logic is more plausible than a regulative one. I. Kant Finite Experience and The Critique Of virginal Reason 1.1. The Regulative Logical Employment of Reason Kants first Critique is an impressive analysis of the theoretical mind, an attempt to discover its nature, message for knowledge, and limits.
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