The transcendental Kantian principles
The problem of the unity and objectivity of knowledge in the Critique of Pure Reason
Abstract
When talking about Kant or his capital work, The Critique of Pure Reason (CRP, Halle, 1781, V ed.; Riga, 1787, 2nd ed.) it is common place to refer to its revolutionary character for the philosophy of the time and modern philosophy in general. It is usual to place it in the historical and philosophical context to which it responds in an original and decisive way for later philosophical work. It is then usual to allude to the antecedents that explain in some way the Kantian system, and thus mention pietism, the religious environment in which Kant was formed; or the science of his century, particularly the Newtonian mechanicism to which Kant so much adhered and admired; or the philosophical currents that influenced him in his pre-critical period, such as the Wolffian dogmatism of the Leibnizian stock, the British island empiricism and, above all, the human scepticism, which Kant appreciated so much.Downloads
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References
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