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Kant

The Critique of Pure Reason 

table of contents

 


 

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Immanuel Kant (1724-1804)

 

 

Editor’s prefatory comment:

Professor Victor Gijsbers, Netherlands, youtube lectures.

 

 

After preliminary comments, the substance The Critique begins with Transcendental doctrine of elements - which is almost 500 pages, but, the second major division, Transcendental doctrine of method, is less than 100 pages.

Almost the entire book deals with the first part. The second division reads almost like an appendix, offering important information but not central to the main thesis of the book.

Transcendental” is a frequent word for Kant, but he doesn’t always clarify in terms of a related word, “transcendent.” The latter for Kant means “transcending the limits of possible experience.” Transcendent philosophy would go beyond normal experience to concepts of God, immortality, the soul, and the like. But Kant suggests that these might be accessed by pure reason alone. Kant will criticize a lot of transcendent metaphysics and say that we need to stay within the limits of pure reason.

“Transcendental” describes the kind of philosophy that Kant wants to do in his book. “Transcendental” for Kant means trying to understand the limits of reason. Transcendental Idealism is the kind of idealism you get into when you think about what the limits of reason are.

Aesthetic” for Kant is not about beauty but he follows the classical meaning which has to do with sensation, the senses. The “transcendental aesthetic” relates to our senses attempting to access the world within the limits of reason, how we perceive things, and the major things that Kant is going to talk about are space and time.

Etymologyonline:

1798, from German Ästhetisch (mid-18c.) or French esthétique (which is from German), ultimately from Greek aisthetikos "of or for perception by the senses, perceptive," of things, "perceptible," from aisthanesthai "to perceive (by the senses or by the mind), to feel," from PIE *awis-dh-yo-, from root *au- "to perceive."

Popularized in English by translations of Kant and used originally in the classically correct sense "science which treats of the conditions of sensuous perception" [OED]. Kant had tried to reclaim the word after Alexander Baumgarten had taken it in German to mean "criticism of taste" (1750s), but Baumgarten's sense attained popularity in English c. 1830s (despite scholarly resistance) and freed the word from philosophy.

The transcendental “aesthetic”, the “analytic” and “dialectic” refer to three different faculties of cognition. The “aesthetic” is about sensibility, the “analytic” refers to understanding (to deal with concepts for the use of making judgments), and the “dialectic” speaks to reason (in the narrow sense).

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS (from the Guyer translation)

(This Table of Contents is the editors' expansion of the less detailed one provided by Kant in the first edition. The second edition contained no Table of Contents at all. A translation of Kant's own first-edition Table of Contents follows the two versions of the preface, corresponding to its original location.)

Motto (added in the second edition)

Dedication

(as in the first edition of 1781)
(as in the second edition of 1787)

Preface (to the first edition)

Preface to the second edition

Table of Contents (as in the first edition)

Introduction (as in the first edition)

I. The idea of transcendental philosophy

On the difference between analytic and synthetic
judgments.

II. Division of transcendental philosophy
 

Introduction (as in the second edition)

I. On the difference between pure and empirical cognition.

II. We are in possession of certain a priori cognitions, and
even the common understanding is not without them.

III. Philosophy needs a science that determines the possibility,
the principlesb and the domain of all a priori cognitions.

IV. On the difference between analytic and synthetic
judgments.

V. Synthetic a priori judgments are contained as principles' in
all theoretical sciences of reason.

VI. The general problem of pure reason.

VII. The idea and the divisions of a special science under the
name of a critique of pure reason.

I. Transcendental doctrine of elements

First Part. Transcendental aesthetic (as in the first edition)
[Introduction.]

First section. On space.
Second section. On time.

First Part. Transcendental aesthetic (as in the second edition)
Introduction.

First section. On space.
Second section. On time.

General remarks on the transcendental aesthetic.

Second Part. Transcendental logic.
Introduction. The idea of a transcendental logic

I. On logic in general.
II. O n transcendental logic.
III. On the division of general logic into analytic and dialectic.
IV. On the division of transcendental logic into the transcen-
dental analytic and dialectic.

Division one. Transcendental analytic

Book I. Analytic of concepts

Chapter I. On the clue to the discovery of all pure concepts
of the understanding

First section. On the logical use of the understanding in
general.

Second section. On the logical function of the
understanding in judgments.

Third section. On the pure concepts of the
understanding or categories.

Chapter II. On the deduction of the pure concepts o f the understanding

First section. O n the principlesa o f a transcendental
deduction in general.

Transition to the transcendental deduction of the
categories.

Second section. On the a priori grounds for the possibility of experience. (as in the first edition)

Third section. On the relationO of the understanding to
objects in general and the possibility of cognizing
these a priori. (as in the first edition)

Second Section. Transcendental deduction o f the pure
concepts of the understanding. (as in the second
edition)

Book II. Analytic of principles

Introduction. On the transcendental power of judgment in general

Chapter I . On the schematism of pure concepts of the
understanding

Chapter II. System o f all principles of pure understanding

Section I. On the supreme principle of all analytic
judgments.

Section II. On the supreme principle of all synthetic
judgments.

Section III. Systematic representation o f all synthetic principles of pure understanding.

1 . Axioms of intuition 286
2 . Anticipations of perception 290
3 . Analogies of experience 2 9 5

A. First analogy: principle of persistence of substance.
B . Second analogy: principle of temporal succession according to the law of causality.
C. Third analogy: principle of simultaneity according to the law of reciprocity or community.

4. The postulates of empirical thought in general

Refutation of idealism (added in the second edition)
General note on the system of principles (added in
the second edition)

Chapter III. On the ground of the distinction of all objects in general into phenomena and noumena
(as in the first edition)

Chapter III. On the ground of the distinction of all objects in general into phenomena and noumena
(as in the second edition)

Appendix: On the amphiboly of concepts of reflection
Remark to the amphiboly of concepts of reflection

Division two. Transcendental dialectic

Introduction.

I. Transcendental illusion
II. On pure reason as the seat of transcendental illusion

A. O n reason i n general.
B. On the logical use o f reason.
C. On the pure use of reason.

Book I. On the concepts of pure reason

Section I. On the ideas in general.
Section II. On the transcendental ideas.
Section III. The system of transcendental ideas.

Book II. The dialectical inferences of pure reason

Chapter I. The paralogisms of pure reason (as in the first edition)

First paralogism of substantiality.
Second paralogism of simplicity.
Third paralogism of personality.
Fourth paralogism o f ideality.

Observation on the sum of the pure doctrine of the soul

Chapter I. The paralogisms of pure reason (as in the second edition)

Refutation of Mendelssohn's proof of the persistence of the soul.

General remark concerning the transition from rational psychology to rational cosmology.

Chapter II. The antinomy of pure reason

Section I. The system of cosmological ideas.
Section II. The antithetic of pure reason.

First conflict
Second conflict
Third conflict
Fourth conflict

Section III. On the interest of reason in these conflicts.
Section IV. On the transcendental problems of pure reason, insofar as they absolutely must be capable of a solution.
Section V. Skeptical representation of the cosmological questions raised by all four transcendental ideas.
Section VI. Transcendental idealism as the key to solving the cosmological dialectic.
Section VII. Critical decision of the cosmological conflict of reason with itself.
Section VIII. The regulative principleb of pure reason in regard to the cosmological ideas.
Section IX. The empirical use of the regulative principle of reason in regard to the cosmological ideas.

I. Resolution of the cosmological idea of totality of the composition of the appearances into a world-whole.
II. Resolution of the cosmological idea of totality of division of a given whole in intuition.

Concluding remark o n the resolution of the mathematical-transcendental ideas and preamble to the solution of the dynamical transcendental ideas.

III. Resolution of the cosmological idea of the totality in the derivation of occurrences in the world from their causes.

The possibility of causality through freedom.
Clarification of the cosmological idea of freedom.

IV. Resolution of the cosmological idea of the totality of the dependence of appearances regarding their existence in general.

Concluding remark to the entire antinomy of pure reason.

Chapter III. The ideal of pure reason

Section I. The ideal in general.
Section II. The transcendental ideal (prototypon
transcendentale).
Section III. The grounds of proof of speculative reason
inferring the existence of a highest being.
Section IV. On the impossibility of an ontological proof of God's existence.
Section V. On the impossibility of a cosmological proof of God's existence.

Discovery and explanation of the dialectical illusion in all transcendental proofs of the existence of a necessary being.

Section VI. On the impossibility of the physicotheological proof.
Section VII. Critique of all theology from principles of
reason.

Appendix to the transcendental dialectic
On the regulative use of the ideas of pure reason. On the final aim of the natural dialectic of human reason.

II. Transcendental doctrine of method

Introduction.

Chapter I . The discipline o f pure reason 6 2 8

Section I. The discipline o f pure reason in dogmatic use.
Section II. The discipline of pure reason with regard to its polemical use.

On the impossibility of a skeptical satisfaction of pure reason that is divided against itself.

Section III. The discipline of pure reason with regard to hypotheses.
Section IV. The discipline of pure reason with regard to its proofs.

Chapter II. The canon of pure reason

Section 1. On the ultimate end of the pure use of our reason.
Section II. On the ideal of the highest good.
Section III. On having an opinion, knowing, and believing.
Chapter III. The architectonic of pure reason
Chapter Iv. The history of pure reason

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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