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Kant's Theory of Knowledge An Analytical Introduction

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ISBN-10: 0195153073

ISBN-13: 9780195153071

Edition: 2004

Authors: Georges Dicker

List price: $59.00
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The Critique of Pure Reason is Kant's acknowledged masterpiece, in which he tackles the question of how we can possibly have knowledge that does not rest on experience (a priori knowledge). The first half of the Critique advances a constructive theory of human cognition and defends the possibility of human knowledge against the skeptical empiricism of Hume. These sections of the Critique are difficult for beginners and for advanced students alike. While there exist many scholarly works discussing the Critique on an advanced level, this book is explicitly designed to be read alongside the text by first-time readers of Kant. Dicker makes Kant's views and arguments as accessible as possible…    
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Book details

List price: $59.00
Copyright year: 2004
Publisher: Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Publication date: 11/4/2004
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 280
Size: 9.09" wide x 6.10" long x 0.39" tall
Weight: 0.836

Introduction
Geometry, space, and transcendental idealism
Categories and principles of the understanding
The central argument of the analytic (I) : the transcendental deduction
The central argument of the analytic (II) : the analogies of experience, the two time-orders, and the B-deduction
The first analogy : substance
The second analogy : causality
The third analogy : interaction
Kant's refutation of idealism
The schematism