Real Existence, Ideal Necessity: Kant's Compromise, and the Modalities Without the Compromise

Berlin, Germany: ISSN ()
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Abstract

"Analytic philosophy has leveled many challenges to Kant's ascription of necessary properties and relations to objects in his Critique of Pure Reason. Some of these challenges can be answered, it is argued here, largely in terms of techniques belonging to analytic philosophy itself, in particular, to its philosophy of language. This Kantian response is the primary objective of this book. It takes the form of a compromise between the real existence of the objects that we can intuit and that get our knowledge started - dubbed initiators - and the ideality of the necessary properties and relations that Kant ascribes to our sensible representations of initiators, which he entitles appearances. Whereas the real existence of initiators is independent of us and our senses, the necessity of these properties and relations of appearances is due to their origins in the mind."--BOOK JACKET.

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Robert Greenberg
Brandeis University

Citations of this work

Making Kant's Empirical Realism Possible.Simon Gurofsky - 2018 - Dissertation, University of Chicago
Chapter 11 Contrasting Readings of Kant.Sheila Webb - 2020 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 54 (6):1658-1672.
Chapter 11: Contrasting Readings of Kant.Sheila Webb - forthcoming - Journal of Philosophy of Education.

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