The Sensible and Intelligible Worlds: New Essays on Kant’s Metaphysics and Epistemology 1st Edition – Ebook Instant Download/Delivery ISBN(s): 9780199688265,0199688265,9780192689900, 0192689908
Product details:
- ISBN-10: 0192689908
- ISBN-13: 9780192689900
- Author: Karl Schafer
The Sensible and Intelligible Worlds represents a new wave of interest in ‘the metaphysical Kant’. In recent decades Kant scholars have increasingly become skeptical of interpreting Kant as a philosopher who wished to truly “leave metaphysics behind”. The contributors to this volume share a common commitment to the idea that Kant’s philosophy cannot be properly understood without careful attention to its metaphysical presuppositions and, in particular, to how those metaphysical presuppositions are compatible with Kant’s critique of more “dogmatic” forms of metaphysical thought. The authors approach Kant’s thought from a wide variety of different perspectives – emphasizing not just the familiar Leibnizian background to Kant’s metaphysics, but also its broadly Aristotelian underpinnings and its relationship with metaphysical themes in post-Kantian German Idealism. Similarly, although most of the essays in this volume relate in some way to the familiar question of how best to interpret Kant’s transcendental idealism, they also deal with a wide range of other topics, including Kant’s modal metaphysics, his views on the continuum, his epistemology of the a priori, and the foundations of his “metaethical” views.
Table contents:
1:Being Realistic about Kant’s Idealism
2:Schopenhauer’s Transcendental Aesthetic
3:Relation to an Object: the Role of the Categories
4:Kant on Concepts, Intuitions, and Sensible Synthesis
5:A Transcendental Argument for the Principle of Possibility
6:Kant on the Epistemology of the Obvious
7:How Does Kant Conceive of Self-Consciousness?
8:The Labyrinth of the Continuum: Leibniz, the Wolffians
9:Kantian Appearances as Object-Dependent Senses
10:Kant’s Conception of Cognition and Our Knowledge of Things-in-Themselves
11:Noumena as Grounds of Phenomena, Ralf Bader
12:Thing and Object
13:12. Kant’s One-World Phenomenalism: How the Moral Features Appear
14:12. Kant’s Enigmatic Transition: Practical Cognition of the Supersensible
15:12. Kant’s Derivation of the Moral ‘Ought’ From a Metaphysical ‘Is’
People also search:
the sensible world
sensible and intelligible world plato
intelligible vs sensible
the sensible thing
the sensible thing analysis
a sensible woman