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Deduction of Freedom vs Deduction of Experience in Kant’s Metaphysics
... spheres of human being. Proceeding from the above, I analyse the essence, structure and the peculiarities as well as the differences between the deduction of experience and the deduction of freedom. I single out the following features of the two types of deduction. First, theoretical use of reason is aimed at objects while practical reason is aimed at noumena, the foundations of will and freedom. Second, the transcendental deduction of space and time, as well as the deduction of categories, is preceded by transcendental reduction, which is absent in the deduction ...
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Vernunft und Glaube. Zu Kants Deduktion der Gnadenlehre
... conditions that enable the acquisition of rational claims. The justification of the claim of practical reason that faith is a necessary precondition of one‘s moral conduct has now to be understood as complementary to the result of the transcendental deduction of the categories, namely the restriction of theoretical reason to the sensible world. Faith in God’s grace does not represent objective knowledge. As transcending objective knowledge, however, faith refers to the theoretically inexplicable awareness of moral obligation, and with it the idea of an intelligible world, as a necessary precondition of one’s moral conduct in the ...
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Taking Detours through the “Transcendental Dialectic”. The Principles of Homogeneity, Specification, and Continuity
... Ideen. Kant über die Grenzbestimmung der reinen Vernunft. In: B. Dörflinger, G. Kruck, eds. 2011. Über den Nutzen von Illusionen. Die regulativen Ideen in Kants theoretischer Philosophie. Zürich & New York: Olms, pp. 13-28.
Kant, reason, ideas, objective deduction, subjective deduction, transcendental deduction, homogeneity, specification, continuity, transcendental dialectic
Rudolf Meer
7-29
10.5922/0207-6918-2019-1-1
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Transcendental logic and analytic of concepts
... Boston; London, 1992.
13. Jansohn H. Kants Lehre von der Subjektivität. Bonn, 1969.
14. Rohs P. Transzendentale Logik. Meisenheim am Glan, 1976.
15. Swing T. K. Kant’s Transcendental Logic. New Haven; London, 1969.
pure synthesis, constituting of an object, table of categories, deduction of categories, functions, structure, rules and principles of transcendental logic
Semyonov V. Ye.
7-23
10.5922/0207-6918-2011-1-1
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Some remarks on the concept and function of Kant’s theory of schematism in the Critique of Pure Reason
... a clue to distinguishing the Doctrine of Schematism from the Deduction of the Pure Concepts of the Understanding. This provides clarity on the function of schematism. The author conceives of schematism as something entirely new to the Transcendental Deduction of the Categories, namely, as preparation for the use of categories as predicates in sentences known as the ‘Principles of Understanding’ referring to phaenomena (appearances in time and space) rather than the undetermined concept of objects in general. To support this interpretation, the author addresses main concepts of the schematism theory (for instance, those of schema, imagination, homogeneity, and time-determination) and describes the function of schematism. Imagination is ...
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The communication of persons: Kant’s theory of marriage law held captive by pagan anthropology
... Kant’s philosophy of matrimonial law. It focuses on the idea of this law as “possession of a person as a thing and its use as a person”: Kant conceives marriage as an interpersonal relation in an external form of real possession, in the aspect of the objective and subjective goal of such relation, but primarily in the aspect of its legal and ethical possibility. Given the naturalistic interpretation of the constitutive act for this kind of law, the legal deduction of marriage comes in a desperate contradiction with Kant’s ethics of personal dignity, because it seems to lead to a mutual instrumentalization of persons; as a matter of fact, Kant's deduction of marriage rules out the possibility of mutual ...
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Darwinism as the Missing Link in Kant’s Critical Philosophy
... them, i. e. not in logical functions in accordance with metaphysical deduction and not in self-consciousness as transcendental deduction claims, but “from the bottom up” if one considers things in the evolutionary dimension, i. e. in the instincts. ... ... at: <
https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2017/entries/nicolai-hartmann/>
; [Accessed 27 May 2019].
Popper, K., 1994. Objective Knowledge. An Evolutionary Approach. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Smith, C. U. M., 1991. Kant and Darwin. Journal ...
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Kants Freiheitsargument. Diskussion von Heiko Puls: Sittliches Bewusstsein und Kategorischer Imperativ in Kants Grundlegung: Ein Kommentar zum dritten Abschnitt. Berlin und Boston: De Gruyter, 2016. 318 S.
... Accordingly, there is no conclusion from a kind of non-moral consciousness of freedom to the freedom of will and from here to the objective value of the categorical imperative, as many interpreters assume. Due to the ambitiousness of his main thesis and his ... ... Gruyter. (Kantstudien-Ergänzungshefte, 149).
20. Schönecker, D., 2006. How is a Categorical Imperative Possible? Kant’s Deduction of the Categorical Imperative (GMS III, 4). In: C. Horn, D. Schönecker, hg. 2006. Groundwork for the Metaphysics of ...
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The Problem of the Relationship between Apperception, Self-Consciousness and Consciousness in Kant’s Critical Philosophy
... complicated by the difference between the editions of the Critique of Pure Reason in terms of the argumentation in the section on the deduction of categories and Kant’s concept of apperception. Accordingly, the author seeks to clarify the purpose of each of ... ... and to connect them. Self-consciousness is the mode of the functioning of consciousness which makes it possible to study three objects of consciousness: internal and external representations of the subject, the synthetic activity of understanding and our ...
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Analytic Work on Kant — Idealism, Things in Themselves, and the Object of Knowledge
... Themselves”, in: Journal of the History of Philosophy, 47, p. 355—382.
14. Howell, R. 1979, A Problem for Kant, in: E. Saarinen et al., eds., Essays in Honour of Jaakko Hintikka, Dordrecht, p. 331—349.
15. Howell, R. 1992, Kant’s Transcendental Deduction, Dordrecht.
16. Howell, R. 2004, The Conundrum of the Object and Other Problems from Kant, in: Kantian Review, vol. 8, p. 115—136.
17. Howell, R. 2007, Kant’s Theoretical Philosophy — Recent Analytic Interpretations, in: Istoriko-Filosofskiy Almanach [History-of-Philosophy-Yearbook], vol. 2, p. 100—114....
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Consequences and Design in General and Transcendental Logic
... reconcile the substitutional interpretation of formal consequences and a formal analysis of the transcendental relations of objects of experience. However, if we interpret the limitations imposed by transcendental logic on the power of judgement in ... ... à Paris 1302—2002, Actes du colloque de Paris, septembre 2002. Turnout, pp. 117—150.
Normore, C. 1993. The Necessity in Deduction: Cartesian Inference and its Medieval Background. In: Synthese, vol. 96, no. 3, pp. 437—454.
Ockham, W. 1990, Philosophical ...