Alison Laywine presents a new interpretation of one of the most famous texts in modern philosophy: Kant's Transcendental Deduction in his Critique of Pure Reason. She shows how Kant developed his view of a world as a whole unified by universal laws, and his view of experience as the whole of all possible appearances unified by universal laws.
Alison Laywine presents a new interpretation of one of the most famous texts in modern philosophy: Kant's Transcendental Deduction in his Critique of Pure Reason. She shows how Kant developed his view of a world as a whole unified by universal laws, and his view of experience as the whole of all possible appearances unified by universal laws.
Alison Laywine completed her doctoral studies at the University of Chicago. She is currently Associate Professor of Philosophy at McGill University. Her research interests extend to ancient philosophy, philosophy of science, and the history of music theory in antiquity and the middle ages.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1: The Duisburg Nachlaß 2: The Transcendental Deduction Gets Underway 3: §18 and §19 of the B-Deduction 4: A Cosmology of Experience - §26 of the B-Deduction 5: Cartography and Autobiography Conclusion
Introduction 1: The Duisburg Nachlaß 2: The Transcendental Deduction Gets Underway 3: §18 and §19 of the B-Deduction 4: A Cosmology of Experience - §26 of the B-Deduction 5: Cartography and Autobiography Conclusion
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