Kant and the capacity to judge :sensibility and discursivity in the transcendental analytic of the Critique of pure reason
Originally published: Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1998
Includes bibliographical references )pages ]401[-407( and indexes
B?شatrice Longuenesse ; translated from the French by Charles T. Wolfe
Acknowledgments -- Note on sources and abbreviations -- Introduction -- PART I. The guiding thread -- 1. Synthesis and judgment -- 2. The "threefold synthesis" and the mathematical model -- 3. The transition to judgment -- PART II. The logical forms of judgment as forms of reflection -- 4. Logical definitions of judgment -- 5. How discursive understanding comes to the sensible given : comparison of representations and judgment -- 6. Concepts of comparison, forms of judgment, concept formation -- 7. Judgments of perception and judgments of experience -- PART III. Synthesis intellectualis, synthesis speciosa : transcendental imagination and the foundation of the system of principles -- 8. Synthesis speciosa and forms of sensibility -- 9. The primacy of quantitative syntheses -- 01. The real as appearance : imagination and sensation -- 11. The constitution of experience -- Conclusion : the capacity to judge and "ontology as immanent thinking" -- Bibliography -- Index -- Index of citations of Kant's works
Kant et le pouvoir de juger.
Contributions in doctrine of judgment ، Kant, Immanuel,4271-4081
، Kant, Immanuel,4271-4081.Kritik der reinen Vernunft