I. The General Strategy of the Transcendental Approach -- 1. Transcendental Ontology and Scientific Methodology in the Philosophy of Kant -- 2. The Dynamical Version of Kant's Transcendental Method -- 3. Reduction-Realization: An Analysis of Kant's Transcendental Structure -- 4. Realism and Realization in a Kantian Light -- 5. Reductive Realism and the Problem of Affection in Kant -- 6. A Key to the Problem of Affection -- II. The Dimension of Theoretical Reason -- 7. The Relation between 'Understanding' and 'Reason' in the Architectonic of Kant's Philosophy -- 8. Modes of Transcendental Arguments: Kant's 'Reason' and the Philosophy of Science -- III. The Place of Causality in the Kantian System -- 9. The Kantian 'Dynamic of Reason' and the Place of Causality in Kant's system -- 10. The Conception of Lawlikeness in Kant's Philosophy of Science -- IV. Kant's System and the Philosophy of Science -- 11. Gravity and Intelligibility: Newton to Kant -- 12. Metaphysical and Internal Realism: The Relations between Ontology and Methodology in Kant's Philosophy of Science -- 13. Kant's 'Special Metaphysics' and The Metaphysical Foundations of Natural Science -- V. The Ethical and Religious Dimensions of Kant's Philosophy -- 14. Science and God: The Topology of the Kantian World -- 15. Morality, God and Religion in the Philosophy of Kant.