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Kant’s Central Concept

1920

(3) The Relations of the Categories of the Under- standing to the Ideas of the Reabson. "CONTENTS (4) The Relation of the Ideas of the. [...] D. Every thoughtful reader of the Critique of Pure Reason " knows that one of the most perplexing points in the mastery of the Kantian philosophy is Kant's doc- trine of the " thing-in-itself. " This difficulty is doubt- less partly due to the fact thaethe book primarily deals with the problem of knowledge, and not with the problem of being, and whatever Kant says of the latter is some- what indi [...] (4) Having answered the three preliminary questions which we proposed concerning the Ideas of the Reason, we now proceed to ascertain what is the relation of these Ideas to the concept of the " (A) The Reason, :is a unifying power of the mind, demands for internal phenomena the unifying subject of consciousness, and for external phenomena the unifying grciund of the world. [...] neither the Idea ilor the Heal of the Reason is synonymous with the concept of the This concept, therefore, must not h confounded with the Idea or with the Ideal of the Reason. [...] Thus far we have been occupied with the effort to ascertain the signification of the concept of the " thing-in-itself" as it, is used by Kant in the " Critique of Pure Reason. " We come now to the most difficult question in interpreting the " Critique of Pure Reason : Is this conception of the '6 consistent with the other doctrines of the Kantian philosophy ? Or, to state the question more explici
philosophy religion
Pages
75
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.100014
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-v Ramdas Khan view
Kant’s Central Concept
1-70 Ramdas Khan view

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