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Implications of the Philosophy of Kant Kantdarsaner Tatparya

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Oxford Oxford University Press 2011Description: 218pISBN:
  • 9780198077336
DDC classification:
  • N75.1KI B469
Partial contents:
I. Examination of Willing or of Duty II. Examination of Knowing 59 1. Definition of knowledge 59 2. Phenomenal reality of known object 64 3. Qualifiers of a known object and the act of knowing 66 4. Knowing as generating form and qualifier (form and qualifier as functions of knowing) 68 5. Imagining (thinking) of the constituents of knowledge 71 6. Three kinds of imagining: imagining without any image, imagining with and without image and imagining with image 76 7. Interdependence of understanding, mind and the external senses in the construction of object 79 8. Function of recognition as constitutive of knownness 89 9. Successiveness of the form of space and the form of time 91 10. Constitution of knownness by act of knowing is established by experience 93 11. Critique of validity of experience (a) About action leading to form 95 12. Critique of the Validity of Experience (b) About action leading to qualifiers 105 (1) Justification of the classification of the basic qualifiers 106 (2) Justification of the validity of the basic qualifiers 116 (2a) Justification of knowledge of qualifiers (Subjective Deduction of the Categories) 117 (2b) Justification of knownness of qualifiers (Objective Deduction of Categories) 121 13. The form of schema and principle according to the scheme (scheme & principle) 14. Understanding and reason: Principles of understanding and ideas of reason 131 15. The justification of three ideas of reason-The self, the world and god 135 16. Four states of the self and the world in the relation of pervasion, etc. and three states of god 138 17. The ideas of reason as objects of contemplation 145 III. Examination of Feeling 147 1. Judgments which have predicate as adjective and those which have predicate as nominative and substantive (determinative & reflective judgment) 147 2. Judgment corresponding to contemplation on bliss: Aesthetic & teleological judgments 148 3. Judgment which follows reverential contemplation: Moral judgment 151 IV. Collection of Certainties 154
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Books Books DVK Library Stack -> Second Floor -> N N75.1KI B469 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 11047222

includes index and biblioraphy

I. Examination of Willing or of Duty II. Examination of Knowing 59 1. Definition of knowledge 59 2. Phenomenal reality of known object 64 3. Qualifiers of a known object and the act of knowing 66 4. Knowing as generating form and qualifier (form and qualifier as functions of knowing) 68 5. Imagining (thinking) of the constituents of knowledge 71 6. Three kinds of imagining: imagining without any image, imagining with and without image and imagining with image 76 7. Interdependence of understanding, mind and the external senses in the construction of object 79 8. Function of recognition as constitutive of knownness 89 9. Successiveness of the form of space and the form of time 91 10. Constitution of knownness by act of knowing is established by experience 93 11. Critique of validity of experience (a) About action leading to form 95 12. Critique of the Validity of Experience (b) About action leading to qualifiers 105 (1) Justification of the classification of the basic qualifiers 106 (2) Justification of the validity of the basic qualifiers 116 (2a) Justification of knowledge of qualifiers (Subjective Deduction of the Categories) 117 (2b) Justification of knownness of qualifiers (Objective Deduction of Categories) 121 13. The form of schema and principle according to the scheme (scheme & principle) 14. Understanding and reason: Principles of understanding and ideas of reason 131 15. The justification of three ideas of reason-The self, the world and god 135 16. Four states of the self and the world in the relation of pervasion, etc. and three states of god 138 17. The ideas of reason as objects of contemplation 145 III. Examination of Feeling 147 1. Judgments which have predicate as adjective and those which have predicate as nominative and substantive (determinative & reflective judgment) 147 2. Judgment corresponding to contemplation on bliss: Aesthetic & teleological judgments 148 3. Judgment which follows reverential contemplation: Moral judgment 151 IV. Collection of Certainties 154

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