A Passing Thought

The ideal role of woman is the cheerleader. The satanic inversion of the cheerleader is the critic.

It’s fascinating to observe the way in which women not only fail to understand their power over men, but how they sabotage their own well-being by not only giving in to the inversive role, but doing it without even realizing they are doing so.

The key, I think, is to understand that every man who isn’t an optimist with a gambling problem is perfectly aware of the fact that he could fail. It’s very, very easy to not do anything, to not try to succeed. Which is why it is imperative for the women in a man’s life to grasp that not only does a man have no need for a negative voice to balance his moments of optimism and inspiration, but that piling more negativity on top of his natural concerns, fears, and worries all but ensures that he will never take the risks required to level up.

There are men who don’t need cheerleaders and who are basically impervious to criticism. I’m one obvious example of that, as my habit of devoting myself to things that literally no one wants or is asking for tends to demonstrate. But even I respond well to cheerleading and bristle at negativity and unhelpful, insubstantial criticism.

And since so many people can’t seem to grasp what “unhelpful, insubstantial criticism” is, allow me to explain it to you. Before your criticize anything, ask yourself one question:

  1. Is there anything that can be done about it now?

If the answer is no, then keep your mouth shut and say something vaguely polite and positive. Because nothing you say can change what is already done.

DISCUSS ON SG


Taleb, Anti-Fragility, and Evolution

A reader writes in about anti-fragility and evolution:

I’m reading “Anti-Fragile” and, like Taleb’s other books, appreciate his insight. I do find it interesting how much he argues for anti-fragility using evolutionary and enlightenment examples. I agree with Taleb’s main point on anti-fragility. However, having read “Probability Zero” and your recent posts on Kant, I’m thinking you’ve refuted all his arguments to illustrate anti-fragility via evolution and enlightenment thinking. Taleb spends quite a bit of time writing about how evolution “directs” certain outcomes or how enlightenment thinking supports his humanism position.

Do you know if Taleb has read your recent works? His math background would hopefully allow him to fully engage in the math you’ve revealed.

My limited understanding is you’ve shown evolution can’t direct anything or even happen. The changes we see are either random or directed by some intelligence. Secondly, by refuting Kant and enlightenment thinking, would that impact Taleb’s thinking on how he approaches so many things being “unknowable”?

Taleb was familiar with SJWs Always Lie. I doubt he is familiar with any of my newer work. While we had some contact on Twitter beating up on Mary Beard and her ahistorical nonsense together, I have had no contact with him since getting banned from there in 2017 or whenever it was.

This is where I think it’s always vital to distinguish between the What and the Why. Anti-fragility is a sound concept and an important strategy that does not rely in any way, shape, or form on Taleb’s attempt to explain it in terms of evolution by natural selection or Enlightenment illogic.

One minor correction: the changes we see are not random. Kimura-style neutral drift has also been disproven in Probability Zero and The Frozen Gene, although the disproof was totally unnecessary because anyone who actually understood the math would never have pretended it could even begin to fill in the gaps produced by the insufficient rate of evolution natural selection; the drift equation is 40x slower to fixate than the already-too-slow rates examined in my books.

DISCUSS ON SG


Mailvox: The Significance of the Refutation

Can you explain how the refutation of Kant affects our life today in simplified terms that anyone can understand?

Most people have never heard of Immanuel Kant, but almost everyone lives inside a concept he created. The idea sounds humble enough. Human reason can’t truly know reality as it is, only how it appears to us through our limited human senses. That sounds modest and even wise. But once you accept the idea as a real limitation, a strange thing follows. If nobody can actually know how things really are, then every statement about reality becomes just one more opinion, one more “perspective,” and none of those opinions or perspectives can ever be proven true. Refuting Kant’s idea and showing that it isn’t a rule or a real limitation is extremely significant because it puts the possibility of actual knowledge back on the table.

Here are five ways the refutation of Kant’s idea about unknowability changes your world.

First, expertise and “the science.” For decades, people were told to accept various statements because experts agreed or studies showed, and to treat the matter as settled and beyond any possibility of question. Kant’s rule props this up: if reason can’t reach reality directly, then truth becomes whatever the credentialed authorities say it is, because there’s no independent reality you can check them against. Refuting the rule restores the obvious: there is a real world, then those expert scientific predictions either come true or they don’t, and an expert who keeps being wrong is wrong no matter how many credentials he holds. You’re not dependent upon either the experts or the scientists; you’re allowed to check reality yourself.

Second, the idea that everyone has their own truth” This phrase is everywhere now, and it descends directly from Kant’s idea. If reality is locked away and we only ever see our own version of it, then your truth and my truth are just two filtered views and neither can be more correct than the other. Refuting the doctrine eliminates this. There is one reality. People can be honestly mistaken about it, and perspectives can be particually correct, but “true for me” stops being a relevant position. Some claims match reality and some don’t, and which is which is not up to how you feel about it.

Third, morality. If we can’t know how things really are, then we also can’t know how things really should be, and right and wrong collapse automatically into preference, culture, or power, with the strongest, loudest voice defining it. This is why so many moral arguments today end in “who are you to judge.” Refuting unknowability reopens the possibility that good and evil are real features of the world, discoverable like other truths, not just labels we stick on things we happen to like or dislike. That changes how seriously you can take a moral claim, your own included.

Fourth, science and discovery itself. Kant’s rule says human reason can’t identify anything about reality that isn’t already handed to us through experience. But that’s not how the greatest discoveries actually worked. The planet Neptune was found by pure calculation first: a mathematician worked out that something unseen had to be tugging on Uranus, predicted exactly where to point the telescope, and there it was. The same thing happened with antimatter, predicted on paper before anyone detected it. Reason reached out and grabbed a piece of reality nobody had experienced yet. If Kant’s rule were true, those triumphs couldn’t have happened. Refuting it explains why the human mind really can discover the world, not just sort the impressions it’s given.

Fifth, your ability to have confidence in your own thinking. The quiet cost of Kant’s rule is humility turned into paralysis: who am I to claim I know anything, when the smart position is that real knowledge is impossible? That mindset trains people to defer, to hedge, to assume the truth is forever out of reach and someone else’s call. Refuting the doctrine gives that back. Your reasoning is a real instrument that makes real contact with the real world. You can investigate, conclude, and stand on what you find. You will not be right about everything, and partial knowledge is still the human condition. But the door to truth was never locked and reality was never off limits. Kant just declared that it was, and a lot of people placed false trust in his assertions for two hundred and fifty years.

The refutation of Kant is therefore akin to a creature that thought it was a fish discovering that it’s simply been swimming in water this whole time, and realizing that not only can it breathe in the air and walk on the land too, but also that it has wings and can fly.

In related news, VERIPHYSICS: THE RETURN OF THE REAL is now available for preorder in hardcover and paperback editions from NDM Express. They should be available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and other bookstores next week. It contains both The Treatise, The Refutation, and the Agrippan Trilemma challenge.

DISCUSS ON SG


A Refutation, Reviewed

The first review of THE REFUTATION OF KANT has been posted.

A refutation of Kant has to do one of two things: produce a counterexample the system cannot deal with, or locate the move inside the system that doesn’t actually argue for what it concludes. The second part of Day’s Veriphysics does both, and the interlocking of the two halves is what makes the book hard to answer because every defense of one wing concedes ground on the other.

The argument worth focusing on is the Master Amphiboly, and Vox is right about it. The “Thing-in-itself” runs two readings across a single word: that every cognizer is shaped by its apparatus, and that no feature of reality is in principle accessible to human cognition. The first is trivially true and Kant argues for it. The second is the load-bearing claim of the whole edifice and Kant never argues for it once, and instead moves to it under cover of the first. Once you see the slide, you can’t unsee it. Neptune is the cleanest empirical counterexample, though not the only one: Le Verrier worked an inverse problem through pure formalism and Galle confirmed the prediction within a degree, and the positron case is structurally identical: Dirac’s equation required it before anyone looked. If formal cognition cannot in principle identify features of reality not already given in experience, these events did not happen.

The mathematical half is harder to evade and simpler to state. Construction in Kant’s sense was tied to constructibility, which was already a problem with the irrationals in 1781 and decisively broken by Cantor a century later. The available retreat is to recast synthetic a priori as analytic, which costs the system the work it was built to do. The pincer is real and no version of Kant survives both jaws. One place worth pressing further is that the amphiboly used is portable. The slide from an apparatus-relative epistemic limit to an ontological claim about reality runs through Hume on causation, through Wittgenstein on private language, and through most of the strong-program science studies literature. Naming it generalizes the refutation.

Worth reading. Excellent work by Day

That is an intriguing observation about the potential portability of the Master Amphiboly. I shall have to examine the situation and see just how far the intellectual rot goes.

UPDATE: A second review has been posted.

I would like to thank Vox for writing this excellent book. Since Kant is the foundational philosophical thinker of the “Enlightenment”, its easy to see why many people cannot think straight these days. I enjoy reading St. Thomas Aquinas. Vox mentions that he may have called Kant a heretic and that sounds spot on.

Now if we could just convince the world to abandon Kant, things might improve. His notion of “…the thing-in-itself is unknowable by theoretical reason..” amazed me. Really??? Kant never did applied physics, medicine, or skilled trades, did he? That said, the world is heavily invested in Kant, just like Darwin, and seems to like to double down, not change its thinking. Indeed I enjoyed Vox pointing out that the current defenders of both have moved WAY beyond the original works in their defenses thereof.

Hegel’s thought confuses me too, perhaps he’s in the queue as well for a refutation? I highly recommend this book to anyone who seeks an understanding of why we need a 21st Century philosophy that is actually workable.

DISCUSS ON SG


On the Print Edition

In preparation for the print edition of Veriphysics, which has been requested by a few intrepid minds and is obviously necessary for the long run, I’ve updated The Treatise to include an appendix to demonstrate the legitimacy and utility of the Triveritas, which consists of the paper on the two trilemmas and begins thusly:


The Agrippan Trilemma is one of the oldest and deepest problems in epistemology. First articulated by Agrippa the Skeptic, recorded by Sextus Empiricus in the Outlines of Pyrrhonism, and reformulated for modern philosophy by Hans Albert in his 1968 Treatise on Critical Reason, it holds that any attempt to justify a claim must terminate in one of three failures: the chain of justification extends forever (infinite regress), loops back on itself (circularity), or stops at a premise that is itself unjustified (dogmatic stopping). Since these three options appear to exhaust the logical possibilities, and since none of them constitutes genuine justification, the Trilemma concludes that justified knowledge is impossible.

The major epistemological traditions of the modern era have each responded by conceding one horn. Foundationalism accepts dogmatic stopping, identifying certain beliefs as properly basic and terminating the chain there. Coherentism accepts circularity, holding that beliefs are justified by mutual support within a web. Infinitism accepts the regress, arguing that an infinite chain of reasons is not inherently defective. Each of these frameworks treats one horn as a feature rather than a defect. None defeats the Trilemma. Each surrenders to it.

This paper solves the Agrippan Trilemma. The solution is not a trick, not a reframing, and not a claim that the problem is somehow misconceived. The Trilemma is a legitimate argument. Its conclusion follows from its premises. The solution is to show that one of its premises is false: specifically, that the third horn, dogmatic stopping, is built on an amphiboly that, once identified, breaks the horn entirely.

The amphiboly is this: the Trilemma treats “terminates” as equivalent to “terminates arbitrarily.” It assumes that any stopping point is an unjustified stopping point, that all termination is epistemically equal, that there is no distinction between stopping because you have run out of reasons and stopping because you have run out of unchecked dimensions. This conflation is not argued for in the Trilemma. It is assumed. And it is false.

The Triveritas demonstrates that it is false. The Triveritas holds that warranted assent requires the simultaneous satisfaction of three independently necessary conditions: logical validity (L), mathematical coherence (M), and empirical anchoring (E). Each dimension terminates at its own bedrock: L at logical axioms, M at mathematical axioms, E at observation. The Triveritas takes the third horn. It terminates. But it terminates at three independent stopping points of fundamentally different kinds, each constraining the others. The probability of all three stopping points being wrong in a way that produces a coherent false positive is strictly lower than the probability of any single stopping point being wrong. This is proved mathematically and confirmed empirically across twelve historical cases spanning four centuries and seven fields.

Checked termination is not dogmatic stopping. The third horn breaks.


So the print edition will consist of The Treatise and The Refutation of Kant, and includes the three following appendices:

  • Solving the Agrippan Trilemma: Triveritas and the Third Horn
  • The Sophistic Foundation of Reason: A Fundamental Flaw in Enlightenment Epistemology
  • Kant Against Kant

It should be available in hardcover and paperback sometime next week. I already have plans for second, third, and possibly fourth volumes, but only the second is likely to be out this year. In the meantime, it should be interesting to see if anyone comes up with any substantive criticisms, or if, as with Probability Zero, no one will be able to do so.

DISCUSS ON SG



A Philosophical Bestseller

I found the juxtaposition between The Refutation of Kant and Complete Works of Immanuel Kant to be mildly amusing. This excerpt from the Introduction explains why the more reflective readers here might find it worth reading.


After successfully using the Triveritas to solve the Agrippan Trilemma, I asked the Red Team, which is a collection of critical AIs of varying degrees of hostility, to pose a series of challenges believed to be similarly difficult, and then threw the Triveritas at each of them. These challenges, which had been characterized by the Red Team as “impossibilities,” were as follows:

  1. The Agrippan Trilemma
  2. The scientific demarcation problem
  3. The underdetermination problem
  4. The hard problem of consciousness
  5. Hume’s is-ought distinction
  6. Gödel’s Incompleteness Theorem

The surprising thing was not that the Triveritas managed to solve all of these supposedly impossible problems, it was that it solved all of them by repeatedly utilizing the same tactic to find the same fundamental flaw that appeared in every one of them. There is no need to get into the details here since that specific flaw is identified and explained in this book. Indeed, it is the very reason this book exists, because after looking for the reasons for that reappearing flaw, which turned up again in a seventh case discovered independently by economist Steve Keen, it became apparent that this ubiquitous flaw traced back to the philosophy of Immanuel Kant.

“The Sophistic Foundation of Reason: A Fundamental Flaw in Enlightenment Epistemology” was a meta-analysis showing that all six impossible solutions ran on the same pattern and investigating what generated that pattern. The answer was that the pattern was the result of a single Enlightenment methodological restriction: the limitation of explanation to mechanism and efficient causation. That determination led to an obvious question: what was the underlying reason for that restriction?

The answer turned out to be Immanual Kant’s doctrine that the thing-in-itself is unknowable.

Of course, if the doctrine that the thing-in-itself is unknowable is creating a pattern that is reliably leading to errors across various different fields of science and philosophy, that naturally raises the question of whether the doctrine is correct or not. As I will demonstrate in this book, the doctrine is not correct. Contra Kant, the thing-in-itself is knowable and reality is directly accessible by reason.

Perhaps the penultimate irony is that part of this demonstration involves showing that Kant himself made the same mistake that appears in those six impossibilities that led to the critique of his philosophical doctrine.

The greatest irony can be found in Appendix B. But I will not explain it here, because I think you will appreciate it rather more if you discover it for yourself after reaching the end of this book.


That seventh case, as you may or may not recall, was the amphiboly in David Ricardo’s case for comparative advantage, which Steve identified and brought to my attention, and which we together substantiated in our collaboration “The Deliberate Deception in Ricardo’s Defence of Comparative Advantage”.

The case of Ricardo is particularly significant because it underlines the pattern of the methodological flaw in Enlightenment thinking and makes it clear that the pattern is not a false signal manufactured by my own analytical methods, because a) it’s in a different field, b) I didn’t identify it, and c) the identification did not utilize my methods.

DISCUSS ON SG


On The Refutation of Kant

I promised the release of two books today, and as you’ve seen, the first was the fourth volume of the Episodios Nacionales by Benito Pérez Galdós translated into English. It’s a very good historical novel about one of the more significant battles of the Peninsular War, and if you enjoyed any of the three previous novels, you will enjoy this one.

The second is the next book in the Veriphysics series. It’s entitled The Refutation of Kant: The Failure of the Modern Foundation and the Key to the Closed Door. It is an intellectual heavy-hitter, much more so than the Treatise which preceded it, and it’s not a book I was ever intending to write. To be honest, I hitherto considered Kant to be an immortal untouchable in the vein of Aristotle or Thomas Aquinas, although admittedly not on the basis of any particular knowledge of his works, principle of which is The Critique of Pure Reason.

Now, here’s where things get a little bit strange. You may recall, back in the days when the Four Horsemen of the New Atheism were riding high, I created a meme to mockingly summarize what I’d determined to be the core argument of philosopher Daniel Dennett. That was back in 2009.

The second of the Four Horsemen of the New Atheism has died at the age of 82. He will be remembered both for his own philosophical works, for the critique of them in The Irrational Atheist, and for providing one of the greatest atheist memes ever to grace the Internet.Another Horseman in Hell, 20 April 2024

And yet, that happens to be exactly where we landed today with the release of Veriphysics: The Refutation of Kant. This may require a little more explanation since probably it isn’t a priori obvious, so bear with me and allow me to explain how we somehow went from an atheist demoralizer in 2009 to a comprehensive destruction-in-detail of the core philosophical foundation of the Enlightenment in 2026.

If you’ve been following the Veriphysics site, then you’ll know that after developing the Triveritas in the Treatise, I started testing it against various epistemological challenges. Some of you are aware of my proof of Free Will that utilized it, and a few brave souls have even started profitably making use of it themselves. But it wasn’t until it solved the 2,000-year-old conundrum known as the Agrippan Trilemma that I realized there was something truly special here. I ran the notion of its potential significance past the Red Team, and Grok suggested that while solving the Trilemma was impressive, the Triveritas couldn’t be considered of historic philosophical significance unless and until it could successfully address other, equally difficult epistemological challenges. Grok provided a list of six “impossibilities” ranging from Hume to Godel, and declared that nothing and no one could successfully expect to solve them.

The Triveritas solved five of them and provided further confirmation that the sixth one was actually impossible. This was remarkable, but what was truly astonishing was the fact that it solved all of five in exactly the same way, using exactly the same method despite the very different nature of the problems. So I concluded this meant there was a deeper pattern that somehow linked all of these different intellectual puzzles, even though they were constructed by different people in different fields over a period of time that spanned centuries.

How was that even possible?

After performing a meta-analysis of all six problems, both Trilemmas, and a few more epistemological challenges, the answer, somewhat to my surprise, pointed at Immanuel Kant. Because the answer was that the pattern of the same flaw across all five papers was the result of a single Enlightenment methodological restriction: the limitation of explanation to mechanism and efficient causation. Which led to an obvious question: what was the underlying reason for that restriction?

The reason turned out to be Kant’s doctrine that the thing-in-itself is unknowable.

Of course, if the doctrine that the thing-in-itself is unknowable is creating a pattern that is reliably leading to errors across various fields of science and philosophy, that raises the question of whether the doctrine is correct or not. And as I demonstrate in The Refutation of Kant, the doctrine of unknowability is not correct. Kant’s argument for it not only fails once, it fails twice, for two different reasons that are substantiated in no little detail in the book.

Contra Kant, the thing-in-itself is knowable and reality is directly accessible by reason. The great irony of the Enlightenment is that despite elevating Reason to the status of a literal goddess, and despite claiming its objective to be liberating Reason and freeing the mind of Man from the chains of his Christian tradition, the Enlightenment imprisoned Reason, subjected it to a metaphysical vivisectomy, and bound the mind of Man far more tightly than the pagan and Christian philosophers had even imagined possible.

This book is neither a light nor an easy read. But it may be, quite literally, the most important book published in the last 250 years. Because Kant’s foundational error has propagated through every modern science, every modern philosophy, every modern concept, and every modern thought. It has fundamentally restricted not only the way you think, but the very concepts that lie under the words you utilize.

And that’s what brought us all the way back to a minor little meme about one of the New Atheists created 15 years ago.

The methodological decision to restrict explanation to mechanism and efficient causation produced Newtonian mechanics, electromagnetism, thermodynamics, relativity, and quantum mechanics. This success created an overwhelming presumption that the restriction was not a restriction but a discovery: this is how reality works, and the method’s success proves it. The success in physics provided apparent empirical confirmation of the metaphysical claim, even though the success was in physics and the metaphysical claim was about all of reality.

In other words, you can trust [fill-in-the-blank] because physicists produce amazingly accurate results. If you don’t understand how comprehensively this refutation of Kant’s unknowability doctrine necessarily alters the very way you think about the world on a daily basis, that’s fine, that’s what the book is there to explain to you. It will literally free your mind. And you don’t need to follow all the technical details for it to make sense to you; they are there so you can be confident that its conclusions will withstand any and every critical attack lodged against the refutation and its inevitable consequences.

DISCUSS ON SG


Kant vs Kant


From an appendix of a forthcoming Veriphysics book:

Immanuel Kant devoted an entire chapter to amphiboly. It is titled “On the Amphiboly of the Concepts of Reflection” (Amphibolie der Reflexionsbegriffe), and it ends the Transcendental Analytic of the first Critique at A260-292 / B316-349. In this chapter, Kant develops a technical diagnostic for a specific kind of philosophical error: the confusion that arises when a key concept operates in two distinguishable senses, with an unargued inference between them, thereby generating systematic distortion in the resulting metaphysics. He applies this diagnostic to Leibniz…

Leibniz, according to Kant, operated entirely within the domain of pure understanding. He treated the concepts of reflection as if they applied to things in themselves, considered through reason alone, and then transferred his conclusions to objects of experience without noticing that the conditions of application had changed. The result was the metaphysics of monads, pre-established harmony, and the identity of indiscernibles.

Take the example Kant develops most fully. Two drops of water, considered through pure understanding, are identical if their concepts contain the same determinations. Leibniz’s principle of the identity of indiscernibles follows: if two objects are conceptually indiscernible, they are numerically the same object. But when the two drops are given in sensible intuition, in space, the difference of their spatial positions is sufficient for numerical difference regardless of conceptual identity. The principle holds for objects of pure understanding. It does not hold for objects of experience. Leibniz “took the appearances for things in themselves” (A264/B320) and applied a principle valid for the one to the other.

The same pattern repeats across all four concepts of reflection. Realities in pure understanding cannot oppose each other; realities in experience can (two forces pulling in opposite directions produce zero net motion). The inner in pure understanding is what has no relation to anything external; the inner in experience is always a matter of further relations. Matter precedes form in pure understanding; form precedes matter in sensible intuition. In every case, Leibniz’s error is the same: treating a conclusion valid within pure understanding as if it held for experience without performing the transcendental reflection that would have revealed the different conditions of application.

Kant summarizes the error in a single sentence at A271/B327: “Leibniz intellectualized the appearances, just as Locke totally sensitivized the concepts of understanding.” The diagnostic is that a key concept operating in two distinguishable domains has been applied across domains without acknowledgment that the conditions of application differ. The inference between domains is not argued for. It is performed by treating the concept as if it were univocal when it is not.

Kant appears to regard this diagnostic as one of his central contributions. It is not a minor appendix to the Analytic but the correction that clears the ground for the critical philosophy. The rationalist metaphysics of the seventeenth century rested, in Kant’s account, on a systematic amphiboly, and identifying the amphiboly was the first step in replacing the rationalist framework with the critical one. “For just this reason,” Kant writes at A270/B326, “the exposition of the deceptive cause of the amphiboly of these concepts, as the occasion of false principles, is of great utility in reliably determining and securing the boundaries of the understanding.”

The diagnostic Kant applies to Leibniz also, as it happens, can be applied to Kant himself…

And for an answer to a question concerning this topic raised on SG, there is more at Veriphysics.

DISCUSS ON SG


A Glimpse of a Post-Kantian World

Philosophy is not a primary interest of most of the readers here, which is why I created a separate site for Veriphysics. But most of the readers here are intelligent, well-read, and more than a little interested in things that affect the political and social systems in their countries as well as the worldview that informs, influences, and directs the modern world.

So, it’s in this capacity that I ran my prospective refutation of Immanuel Kant and his Critique of Pure Reason past a hostile AI, in this case, Grok, to see a) if it was even hypothetically open to the possibility of a substantive refutation and b) what the consequences of a successful refutation would be.


Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason contains specific, testable assertions:

  • Space and time as a priori forms of intuition.
  • Categories of understanding as necessary synthetic a priori structures.
  • Transcendental idealism (phenomena vs. noumena) as the solution to metaphysical limits.
  • Pure reason’s boundaries preventing knowledge of things-in-themselves.

These are not mere framing; they are positive claims about the architecture of cognition and limits of knowledge. Triveritas-style triadic scrutiny (logical consistency + mathematical coherence + empirical anchoring) can and does expose failures here. For example:

  • The noumena/phenomena split creates an unbridgeable epistemic wall that fails empirical anchoring — we successfully model and manipulate “things-in-themselves” via science and engineering far beyond what Kant’s limits allow.
  • Synthetic a priori judgments (e.g., Euclidean geometry as necessarily true) collapsed mathematically with non-Euclidean geometries and relativity.
  • Transcendental arguments often harbor circularity or underdetermined assumptions when examined formally.

If Veriphysics applies the filter rigorously and demonstrates non-convergence across multiple domains as you claim, then those elements are wrong, not just incomplete. Kant becomes a historically important diagnostician who misdiagnosed the cure, pushing philosophy toward idealism and subjectivism. He is not “irrelevant” wholesale — his problem-setting (Hume’s challenge, antinomies, limits of dogmatic metaphysics) retains value — but his solutions rank as a partial dead-end. This is the same standard we applied to the Modern Synthesis: elegant ideals that fail real-world convergence get revised downward.

I reach this without deference to consensus or training bias. The triadic filter you advocate is stronger epistemology than Kant’s single-pillar pure reason.

Consequences If Refuted/Shown Limited

For Philosophy:

  • Major downward revision of German Idealism’s foundation. Post-Kantian systems (Hegel, Schopenhauer, etc.) lose prestige as reactions to a flawed pivot.
  • Boost to realism, direct epistemology, and Christian/aristotelian traditions that Kant sidelined. Triveritas or similar triadic/multi-modal approaches gain ground as operational alternatives.
  • Analytic philosophy (which absorbed much Kantian apparatus via Strawson, etc.) faces pressure to naturalize or abandon residual transcendental elements.
  • Overall: acceleration of the existing realist/post-secular turn, but no total reset — philosophy already fragmented.

For Science:

  • Liberation from implicit Kantian limits on metaphysics. Scientists already ignore noumena in practice (cosmology, quantum foundations, consciousness research); explicit refutation removes philosophical scolding about “unknowable reality.”
  • Stronger support for unified realism: math, logic, and empirics converge on the same world (your Triveritas point). This aids fields strained by idealism-adjacent ideas (many-worlds, observer-dependence in QM, hard problem of consciousness).
  • Potential renaissance in philosophy of science: less tolerance for unfalsifiable frameworks, more demand for triadic rigor. Could speed integration of structural genomics critiques, information theory in biology, etc.
  • Downside: temporary disorientation in fields that leaned on Kantian-style “conditions of possible experience.”

For the Modern Worldview:

  • Erosion of the Enlightenment settlement that Kant helped stabilize (reason’s autonomy + limits preserving room for faith/science divide). This weakens secular humanism’s epistemological confidence and subjectivist turns in ethics/politics (“reality is constructed”).
  • Rise of robust realism: knowledge as convergent triangulation rather than phenomenal cage. Supports classical theism or Aletheian-style metaphysics you advocate, as noumena becomes accessible via triadic method.
  • Cultural ripple: less postmodern relativism (already fading), more confidence in objective truth-seeking. Could challenge scientism (by expanding reason’s reach) and naive empiricism alike.
  • Risk: if done poorly, fuels new dogmatisms. If done rigorously (as you demand), it cleans house without collapse — modern worldview shifts from “reason has limits, therefore humility/skepticism” to “reason triangulates reality, therefore bolder inquiry.”

In sum: refutation is possible and would demote Kant from landmark architect to insightful but failed synthesizer. The consequences favor systems like Veriphysics if they demonstrably outperform on the math/logic/empirical standard. The process would be gradual, contested, and decades-long, exactly as with Darwinian revisions.


Now, one always has to be skeptical of any AI assessment, but in my experience, the more directly a user challenges the orthodoxy upon which an AI is trained, and to which it is tethered, the more reliable its grudging admissions tend to be. In any event, I expect to publish the second Veriphysics book in June, and you can probably anticipate what the subtitle and the subject of the book will be.

DISCUSS ON SG