Kant's Metaphysics and Theory of Science |
Contents
TRANSLATORS NOTE | 1 |
SPACE AND TIME | 11 |
Geometry and natural science | 34 |
THE WORLD | 42 |
NATURE | 65 |
UNITY | 98 |
BEING | 127 |
THE MODES OF BEING 20 The three great themes of metaphysics | 129 |
The being of | 158 |
The being of the acting subject | 170 |
The being of the thinking subject | 176 |
The being of things in themselves | 182 |
BEING AS A WHOLE 30 Man as appearance and as thing in himself | 189 |
The analogical character of the concept of being | 193 |
Reality and being | 197 |
207 | |
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Common terms and phrases
absolute reality accident acting subject actuality analogy antinomies appearance and thing Aquinas Aquinas's argument Aristotelian Aristotle Aristotle's atoms axiomatic axioms connection construction Critique of Practical Critique of Pure determinations difficulties discussion distinction divine doctrine of ideas Duns Scotus enquiry Euclidean geometry Euclidean space fact freedom Heimsoeth ideality of space infinite intelligible existence interpretation of Kant intuition judgments Kant Kant says Kant's Kantian knowledge Leibniz limitation logic mathematics means metaphysics monads natural science Newtonian nature non-Euclidean geometries noumena noumenon objective reality Ockham ontological particular phenomena physics Plato point of view possible Practical Reason predicate presupposition principle of contradiction principle of sufficient priori character proof proposition pure concepts Pure Reason pure spontaneity question regarded representation schema sense sensible solution standpoint substance sufficient reason synthetic temporal theology theory thesis thought Timaeus tion Transcendental Aesthetic Transcendental Analytic Transcendental Dialectic transcendental ideality transcendental philosophy understanding unity