Kant`s Analytic

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York Cambridge University Press 1996Description: 251pDDC classification:
  • N75.1KI B44
Partial contents:
1 SYNTHETIC A PRIORI JUDGMENTS 1. The place of the Aesthetic in the Critique 3 2. Analytic and synthetic 4 3. A priori and a posteriori 8 4. A geometrical experiment 12 2 THE OUTER-SENSE THEORY 5. The form of outer sense 15 6. The status of Kant`s theory 16 7. Sensibility and sense-organs 19 8. Phenomena and noumena 22 9. Spatiality and geometry 27 1O. Euclidean geometry and eyesight 29 3 SPACE AND OBJECTS 11. Chaotic experience33 12. An ordered world 35 13. An ordered, changing world 14. A theory of concept-utility 39 15. The status of Strawson`s theory 41 4 THE INNER-SENSE THEORY 16. The form of inner sense 45 17. Concepts and intuitions 53 18. The negative use of`noumenon` 56 5 INTUITIONS OF SPACE AND TIME 19. A priori concepts and a priori intuitions 61 20. The singularity and infinity of space and time 64 6 THE METAPHYSICAL DEDUCTION 21. Concepts and judgments page 71 22. The table of judgments 76 23. The Metaphysical Deduction of the Categories 79 7 THE CATEGORIES CONSIDERED 24. Concepts and language 84 25. Some indispensable concepts 88 26. The relational categories 92 27. The acquisition of concepts 95 8 TRANSCENDENTAL DEDUCTION: THE MAIN THREAD 28. The unity of consciousness 100 29. Synthesis 107 30. Transcendental synthesis in 31. The use of criteria 117 9 TRANSCENDENTAL DEDUCTION: FURTHER ASPECTS 32. Objectivity and `what solipsism means` 126 33. Objectivity and the Transcendental Deduction 130 34. `Imagination` in the Transcendental Deduction 134 ANALYTIC OF PRINCIPLES 10 SCHEMATISM 35. Concepts and schematism 141 36. How to apply concepts 143 37. The `problem` about category-application 148 11 CAUSAL NECESSITY 38. Kant and Hume on causality 153 39. Necessity and universality 159 12 THE AXIOMS, ANTICIPATIONS, AND POSTULATES 40. The ` System of all Principles`: preliminaries 164 41. Extent 167 42. Intensity 170 43. Continuity 176 13 THE FIRST ANALOGY 44. The Analogies of Experience: preliminaries page 181 45. Two senses of`substance` 182 46. Substances and objects 184 47. Alterations and existence-changes 187 48. Substances and properties 189 49. Reductionism 193 50. Substances as sempiternal 197 14 THE REFUTATION OF IDEALISM 51. The realism argument 202 52. Kant`s two refutations of empirical idealism 215 15 THE SECOND ANALOGY 53. The object/process argument 219 54. The ordering argument 222
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Books Books DVK Library N75.1KI B44 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 77060006

includes index and biblioraphy

1 SYNTHETIC A PRIORI JUDGMENTS 1. The place of the Aesthetic in the Critique 3 2. Analytic and synthetic 4 3. A priori and a posteriori 8 4. A geometrical experiment 12 2 THE OUTER-SENSE THEORY 5. The form of outer sense 15 6. The status of Kant`s theory 16 7. Sensibility and sense-organs 19 8. Phenomena and noumena 22 9. Spatiality and geometry 27 1O. Euclidean geometry and eyesight 29 3 SPACE AND OBJECTS 11. Chaotic experience33 12. An ordered world 35 13. An ordered, changing world 14. A theory of concept-utility 39 15. The status of Strawson`s theory 41 4 THE INNER-SENSE THEORY 16. The form of inner sense 45 17. Concepts and intuitions 53 18. The negative use of`noumenon` 56 5 INTUITIONS OF SPACE AND TIME 19. A priori concepts and a priori intuitions 61 20. The singularity and infinity of space and time 64 6 THE METAPHYSICAL DEDUCTION 21. Concepts and judgments page 71 22. The table of judgments 76 23. The Metaphysical Deduction of the Categories 79 7 THE CATEGORIES CONSIDERED 24. Concepts and language 84 25. Some indispensable concepts 88 26. The relational categories 92 27. The acquisition of concepts 95 8 TRANSCENDENTAL DEDUCTION: THE MAIN THREAD 28. The unity of consciousness 100 29. Synthesis 107 30. Transcendental synthesis in 31. The use of criteria 117 9 TRANSCENDENTAL DEDUCTION: FURTHER ASPECTS 32. Objectivity and `what solipsism means` 126 33. Objectivity and the Transcendental Deduction 130 34. `Imagination` in the Transcendental Deduction 134 ANALYTIC OF PRINCIPLES 10 SCHEMATISM 35. Concepts and schematism 141 36. How to apply concepts 143 37. The `problem` about category-application 148 11 CAUSAL NECESSITY 38. Kant and Hume on causality 153 39. Necessity and universality 159 12 THE AXIOMS, ANTICIPATIONS, AND POSTULATES 40. The ` System of all Principles`: preliminaries 164 41. Extent 167 42. Intensity 170 43. Continuity 176 13 THE FIRST ANALOGY 44. The Analogies of Experience: preliminaries page 181 45. Two senses of`substance` 182 46. Substances and objects 184 47. Alterations and existence-changes 187 48. Substances and properties 189 49. Reductionism 193 50. Substances as sempiternal 197 14 THE REFUTATION OF IDEALISM 51. The realism argument 202 52. Kant`s two refutations of empirical idealism 215 15 THE SECOND ANALOGY 53. The object/process argument 219 54. The ordering argument 222

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