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Problems from Kant
 
 
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Problems from Kant [Hardcover]

James Van Cleve (Author)

Price: $110.00 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Book Description

August 12, 1999 0195083229 978-0195083224
This rigorous examination of Kant's Critique of Pure Reason provides a comprehensive analysis of the major metaphysical and epistemological questions of Kant's most famous work. Author James Van Cleve presents clear and detailed discussions of Kant's positions and arguments on these themes, as well as critical assessments of Kant's reasoning and conclusions.

Expansive in its scope, Van Cleves study covers the overall structure of Kant's idealism, the existence and nature of synthetic a priori knowledge, the epistemology of geometry, and the ontological status of space, time, and matter. Other topics explored are the role of synthesis and the categories in making experience and objects of experience possible, the concepts of substance and causation, issues surrounding Kant's notion of the thing in itself, the nature of the thinking self, and the arguments of rational theology. A concluding chapter discusses the affinities between Kant's idealism and contemporary antirealism, in particular the work of Putnam and Dummett.

Unlike some interpreters, Van Cleve takes Kant's professed idealism seriously, finding it at work in his solutions to many problems. He offers a critique in Kant's own sense--a critical examination leading to both negative and positive verdicts. While finding little to endorse in some parts of Kant's system that have won contemporary favor (for example, the deduction of the categories) Van Cleve defends other aspects of Kant's thought that are commonly impugned (for instance, the existence of synthetic a priori truths and things in themselves). This vital study makes a significant contribution to the literature, while at the same time making Kant's work accessible to serious students.


Editorial Reviews

Review


"This book will enjoyed not only by those philosophers interested in Kant, but by those interested in metaphysics and epistemology more generally. [Van Cleve] writes with directness and accessibility and care; there can be few recent books on the problems of Kant's First Critique that treat so great a range of arguments with such seriousness and sophistication. Van Cleve is a sympathetic interpreter, often finding himself on Kant's side. Clarity and rigor are among the book's notable virtues. There is an impressive knowledge of the contemporary English language. In their precision, originality and brevity, these are gems of analysis, which prove as useful for introducing students to these topics as for shedding light on Kant.This is a splendid book."--The Philosophical Review


About the Author

James Van Cleve is at Brown University.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
"The most important and difficult function of philosophy," wrote Sir William Hamilton, is "to determine the shares to which the knowing subject and the object known may pretend in the total act of cognition." Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
objectual experience, noumenal items, relativized predication, general causal maxim, analytical phenomenalism, supervenient entities, unity premise, modal ontological argument, specific causal laws, isomorphic with respect, reducibility principle, incongruent counterparts, argument from geometry, part series beginning, rational psychologist, thick experience, phenomenal substances, exploring series, more basic entities, ens realissimum, causal truths, noumenal self, noumenal beings, absolutely necessary being, having intuitions
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Critique of Pure Reason, Transcendental Deduction, First Analogy, Metaphysical Deduction, Second Analogy, Kemp Smith, Copernican Revolution, First Antinomy, Mathematical Antinomies, Principle of Fecundity, Principle of Sufficient Reason, Second Antinomy, Synthesis Premise, Category Premise, Dependency Premise, Inaugural Dissertation, Two Dogmas, Hilary Putnam, Michael Dummett, Objective Deduction, Third Paralogism, Transcendental Aesthetic, Backdrop Argument, Contingency Premise, First Paralogism
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