Clarity, Russell- I'm calling for it!
So what I have gathered throughout these first 10 chapters is that Russell generally agrees with Kant on knowledge having a type of twofoldness-being made up of experience and a priori (intuition), reserving possibly some room for his disagreeing with how Kant fleshes these out. The biggest thing I'm having a hard time understanding where Russell is coming from is what he actually thinks of universals. At one point he says that we cannot know anything for certain but can draw high probabilities from our experience of the world. And then he talks about how universals are in fact a thing, like with his example of whiteness and how each individual comprehends it somewhat differently, et there is still a commonality in all humanity's comprehension of whiteness. So what is it, Russell? Are you for relativism or absolutes? Whatcha saying here?
I commented on Ty and Tobias'!
I commented on Ty and Tobias'!
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