Includes bibliographical references (p. 857-867) and index
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
The two prefaces -- The introduction -- Synthetic a priori judgments -- The transcendental/empirical distinction -- The transcendental aesthetic -- Space, time, and perception -- Space and time in experience and in mathematics: the metaphysical and transcendental expositions -- Kant's theory of the sensory contribution to experience -- Two residual issues from the aesthetic: Sellars's and McDowell's "Myth of the given"; Prolegomena #13 -- Kant and skepticism -- The transcendental analytic and metaphysical deduction -- The transcendental deduction (1) -- The transcendental deduction (2): three procedural issues -- The transcendental deduction (3): conceptual unity -- The transcendental deduction (4): personal unity -- The analytic of principles -- The mathematical principles -- The three analogies of experience -- What do the analogies achieve? -- The postulates and refutation of idealism -- Concluding sections of the analytic of principles -- The wider theoretical context of Kant's appeal to things in themselves -- The apparatus and philosophical therapy of the dialectic -- The paralogisms -- The mathematical antinomies -- The third antinomy: freedom of the will -- The fourth antinomy, ideal, and appendix to the dialectic -- The doctrine of method -- A concluding summary of transcendental idealism
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PERSONAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Kant, Immanuel,1724-1804
Kant, Immanuel,1724-1804., Kritik der reinen Vernunft