How is nature possible? : Kant's project in the first critique

Bibliographic Information

How is nature possible? : Kant's project in the first critique

Daniel N. Robinson

Continuum, c2012

  • : hb
  • : pb

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Note

Bibliography: p. 192-195

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

: pb ISBN 9781441148513

Description

How is Nature Possible?: Kants Project in the First Critique presents a clear and systematic appraisal of what is perhaps the most difficult treatise in the philosophical canon. Daniel N. Robinson situates Kants undertaking in the First Critique within the context of the history of philosophy and as a response to the challenges of scepticism. Kants central task in the First Critique is to tie his metaphysical analysis to the very possibility of nature itself. Where others assumed the validity or the weakness of perception and reason, Kant presents a critical appraisal of both, thereby establishing the very limits of sense and reason as instruments of discovery. Ideal for students at all levels, this fascinating introduction clarifies the aims and significance of Kants project, locates its place within the history of philosophy and identifies the strengths and weaknesses reasonably attributed to this most significant contribution to the history of philosophical reflection.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • 1. Preliminaries
  • 2. The Larger Context
  • 3. The Possibility of Metaphysics
  • 4. The Pure Intuitions and the Analogies of Experience
  • 5. Idealisms and their Refutation
  • 6. Concepts
  • 7. Judgment
  • 8. Whose Experience? The Self and Outer Sense
  • 9. The Discipline of Reason: Paralogisms, Antinomies and Freedom
  • Bibliography
  • Index.
Volume

: hb ISBN 9781441176226

Description

This is a concise commentary on Kant's aims and arguments in his celebrated "First Critique", within the context of the dominant schools of philosophy of his time. "How is Nature Possible?: Kant's Project in the First Critique" presents a clear and systematic appraisal of what is perhaps the most difficult treatise in the philosophical canon. Daniel N. Robinson situates Kant's undertaking in the "First Critique" within the context of the history of philosophy and as a response to the challenges of scepticism. Kant's central task in the "First Critique" is to tie his metaphysical analysis to the very possibility of nature itself. Where others assumed the validity or the weakness of perception and reason, Kant presents a critical appraisal of both, thereby establishing the very limits of sense and reason as instruments of discovery. Ideal for students at all levels, this fascinating introduction clarifies the aims and significance of Kant's project, locates its place within the history of philosophy and identifies the strengths and weaknesses reasonably attributed to this most significant contribution to the history of philosophical reflection.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • 1. Preliminaries
  • 2. The Larger Context
  • 3. The Possibility of Metaphysics
  • 4. The Pure Intuitions and the Analogies of Experience
  • 5. Idealisms and their Refutation
  • 6. Concepts
  • 7. Judgment
  • 8. Whose Experience? The Self and Outer Sense
  • 9. The Discipline of Reason: Paralogisms, Antinomies and Freedom
  • Bibliography
  • Index.

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