Monday, May 19, 2008

Kant Blog2

"Reason with all its concepts and laws of the understanding, which suffice for empirical use, i.e., within the sensible world, finds in itself no satisfaction because ever-recurring questions deprive us of all hope of their complete solution."
Along with Roachcoach, when I read this statement what I found to be interesting was the fact that with reasoning always come questioning and you could never find the complete solution in anything. For example, someone gets a haircut, and someone else ask why, that person could say for a reason that he got the haircut because he wanted a new fresh cut, but then the person would say, why not get dreadlocks, why not let it grow. Proving my example there is no complete solution to everything.

No comments: