valign="top"> 2. Kant’s Contribution to the Science of Logic
xxxvi |
3. The Nature of Consciousness |
xxxix |
4. Phenomenalism, Kant’s Substitute for Subjectivism |
xlv |
5. The Distinction between Human and Animal Intelligence |
xlvii |
6. The Nature and Conditions of Self-Consciousness |
l |
7. Kant’s threefold Distinction between Sensibility, Understanding, and Reason |
lii |
8. The place of the Critique of Pure Reason in Kant’s Philosophical System |
lv |
THE CRITIQUE OF PURE REASON[1] |
Title |
1 |
Motto |
4 |
Dedication to Freiherr von Zedlitz |
6 |
Preface To the First Edition |
8 |
Comment on Preface |
10 |
Dogmatism, Scepticism, Criticism |
13 |
Preface To the Second Edition |
17 |
The Copernican Hypothesis |
22 |
Introduction |
26 |
Comment upon the Argument of Kant’s Introduction |
33 |
How are Synthetic a priori Judgments possible? |
43 |
The Analytic and Synthetic Methods |
44 |
Purpose and Scope of the Critique |
56 |
Kant’s relation to Hume |
61 |
Meaning of the term Transcendental |
73 |
The Transcendental Doctrine of Elements |
Part I. The Transcendental Aesthetic |
79-166 |
Definition of Terms |
79 |
Kant’s conflicting Views of Space |
88 |
Section I. Space |
99 |
Kant’s Attitude to the Problems of Modern Geometry |
117 |
Section II. Time |
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