Kant's Copernican Revolution: The Transcendental HorizonImmanuel Kant introduced us to a new way of doing philosophy which shows how the human person can grasp only those features of his or her world which he or she is able to realize through his or her own particular mode of experience. Whatsoever appears on the horizon of human consciousness must appear under the determinate conditions of space and time. Therefore human knowledge is limited. We can never have one to one correspondence with the object of knowledge. For transcendental philosophical reflection, everything which appears in human experience is phenomena. The novelty of Kant's experimental method in philosophy opens up new ways of exploring and understanding what is involved in the knowing process. |
From inside the book
33 pages matching transcendental deduction in this book
Where's the rest of this book?
Results 1-3 of 33
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Necessity and Universality | 44 |
Intuition and Concepts | 50 |
Copyright | |
10 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
appearances argues Beck Bennett Bound of Sense claim cognition concerned conform connection Copernican Revolution Copernicus critical philosophy Critique of Pure determined distinction doctrine empirical knowledge empirical objects epistemology existence fact function given Heidegger human knowledge Hume Hume's Ibid ideas Immanuel Kant inner sense interpretation Jonathan Bennett Kant Studien Kant's Critique Kant's philosophy Kant's Theory Kant's transcendental philosophy Kantian knowledge of objects Leibniz Lewis White manifold metaphysics mind nature necessary conditions necessity Norman Kemp Smith noumenon objective validity objects of experience ontology perceptions Phenomenology possibility of experience possible experience Prauss presupposes principle problem proof pure concepts Pure Reason question reality relation representations Robert Paul Wolff rule Second Analogy self-consciousness space Strawson synthesis synthetic a priori synthetic judgments synthetic propositions things thinking thought Transcendental Arguments transcendental deduction transcendental idealism Transcendental Object transcendental philosophy transcendental proposition truth understanding unity of apperception unity of consciousness University Press