Entry tags:
Kantian meditation
It is quite admissible
to cogitate
the soul
as simple,
for the purpose of
enabling ourselves to
employ the idea of a perfect and
necessary unity of all the faculties
of the mind
as the principle of
all our inquiries into
its internal
phenomena, although
we cannot cognize
this unity in concreto.
But...
The simple is never
presented
in experience;
and, if by substance
is here meant
the permanent object of
sensuous intuition,
the possibility of
a simple phenomenon
is perfectly
inconceivable.
--- Immanuel Kant, The Critique of Pure Reason.
no subject
no subject
My take on it is that simple is the ultimate abstraction. A move from experience to abstraction is impossible, unless we are willing to ignore vast chunks of reality.
I guess it applies to Category Theory too because it has "simple" objects and arrows. But once you get into implementation, the objects and, especially, the arrows become quite a mess.