ABSTRACT: Kant’s problem is transcendental knowledge, as absolutely pure knowledge, that is, completely possible a priori. The path of knowledge passes from feeling, through intellect, to reason. Knowledge through the senses corresponds to an aesthetic, which for the time being means a sensitive way of representation, related to the faculty of knowledge. The research of the intellect is provided by an analysis, revealing either the concepts or the principles/judgments. The investigation of reason, this time in a narrow sense, as a faculty of knowledge superior to the intellect, as complex as it is problematic, is guided by dialectics. Key words: rationality, morality, a priori, phenomenon, intellec
Kant holds that the applicability of the moral ‘ought’ depends on a kind of agent-causal freedom tha...
The primary concern of this paper is to outline an explanation of how Kant derives morality from rea...
This paper reconstructs and defends Kant's argument for the transcendental status of reason's princi...
ABSTRACT: The number is the unity of the synthesis of the diverse of a homogeneous intuition, in tha...
"In ""Critical Elucidation of the Analytic of Pure Practical Reason"" Kant tries to clarify some poi...
In my thesis I explain why the common, pre-theoretical understanding of morality is an important par...
"Kant asserts that the freedom is the condition of the existence of morality and the morality is the...
My dissertation develops a novel account of Kant's moral philosophy by focusing on his conception of...
‘Rationality’ here only concerns knowledge, e.g., ways to acquire scientific knowledge. Ma...
The philosophy of Immanuel Kant contains an important rationalistic element, and the study and inter...
This study attempts to interpret the process of self-knowledge of reason in the transcendental diale...
Kant mentions two faculties of the mind that are involved in the knowing process, namely, sensibilit...
"Morality requires the premise of freedom. But in the empirical world all things happen according to...
If one were to ask a specialist what Kant thought about rational psychology, their first point of re...
Kant mentions two faculties of the mind that are involved in the knowing process, namely, sensibilit...
Kant holds that the applicability of the moral ‘ought’ depends on a kind of agent-causal freedom tha...
The primary concern of this paper is to outline an explanation of how Kant derives morality from rea...
This paper reconstructs and defends Kant's argument for the transcendental status of reason's princi...
ABSTRACT: The number is the unity of the synthesis of the diverse of a homogeneous intuition, in tha...
"In ""Critical Elucidation of the Analytic of Pure Practical Reason"" Kant tries to clarify some poi...
In my thesis I explain why the common, pre-theoretical understanding of morality is an important par...
"Kant asserts that the freedom is the condition of the existence of morality and the morality is the...
My dissertation develops a novel account of Kant's moral philosophy by focusing on his conception of...
‘Rationality’ here only concerns knowledge, e.g., ways to acquire scientific knowledge. Ma...
The philosophy of Immanuel Kant contains an important rationalistic element, and the study and inter...
This study attempts to interpret the process of self-knowledge of reason in the transcendental diale...
Kant mentions two faculties of the mind that are involved in the knowing process, namely, sensibilit...
"Morality requires the premise of freedom. But in the empirical world all things happen according to...
If one were to ask a specialist what Kant thought about rational psychology, their first point of re...
Kant mentions two faculties of the mind that are involved in the knowing process, namely, sensibilit...
Kant holds that the applicability of the moral ‘ought’ depends on a kind of agent-causal freedom tha...
The primary concern of this paper is to outline an explanation of how Kant derives morality from rea...
This paper reconstructs and defends Kant's argument for the transcendental status of reason's princi...