- Page 1 and 2: The Doctrine of Self-positing and R
- Page 3 and 4: Abstract of the Dissertation The Do
- Page 5 and 6: Contents Abbreviations vi Preface v
- Page 7 and 8: Preface The interest in the Opus po
- Page 9 and 10: Acknowledgments I am in the debt of
- Page 11 and 12: Introduction The Selbstsetzungslehr
- Page 13 and 14: of receptivity‖ reveals also the
- Page 15 and 16: enables thinkers in the twenty firs
- Page 17 and 18: form of ―principles of synthesis
- Page 19 and 20: a transition that has its own ―sp
- Page 21 and 22: the English language literature tha
- Page 23 and 24: his account was circular. As Först
- Page 25 and 26: fascicle written by Kant between 18
- Page 27: the doctrine of self-positing attem
- Page 31 and 32: meaning of its particular relations
- Page 33 and 34: ii. a. Ontological Proof In its com
- Page 35 and 36: ecause the only operative rule for
- Page 37 and 38: In the context of the BDG, the natu
- Page 39 and 40: 3. It is unconditionally impossible
- Page 41 and 42: . We know that a condition for inne
- Page 43 and 44: Realerklährung - an explanation of
- Page 45 and 46: ii. b. Setzung‘s Function as Posi
- Page 47 and 48: Negation can also result from chang
- Page 49 and 50: ii. Kritik der reinen Vernunft ii.
- Page 51 and 52: foreclosed. This is precisely what
- Page 53 and 54: none of this is particularly new. N
- Page 55 and 56: elations of thoroughgoing determina
- Page 57 and 58: that exhibits it must share in the
- Page 59 and 60: of this ideal and its final personi
- Page 61 and 62: it perceives only its effects. In a
- Page 63 and 64: category causality in the second an
- Page 65 and 66: Just as time functions as the form
- Page 67 and 68: spontaneous nature. Or perhaps it r
- Page 69 and 70: points to the fact that in the act
- Page 71 and 72: latter (as for the other dynamical
- Page 73 and 74: unity is expressed. In the second a
- Page 75 and 76: Kant‘s new transcendental idealis
- Page 77 and 78: idealize what can be claimed to be.
- Page 79 and 80:
The structure in the schematic of t
- Page 81 and 82:
critical model entails thus the sub
- Page 83 and 84:
continuous reiteration of the most
- Page 85 and 86:
[machen] of experience with the sou
- Page 87 and 88:
and not actuality. 103 These fields
- Page 89 and 90:
functions as ground to a universal
- Page 91 and 92:
appearance, phenomenon, and noumeno
- Page 93 and 94:
Handschrift, when he writes: The mi
- Page 95 and 96:
thought. While the spirit of the cr
- Page 97 and 98:
faculties of representation in ligh
- Page 99 and 100:
particularly in their presence, uni
- Page 101 and 102:
knower to thin an objective represe
- Page 103 and 104:
doctrine, the name is oftentimes qu
- Page 105 and 106:
to intuition. This status brings to
- Page 107 and 108:
Chapter Three: The Analytic Level 1
- Page 109 and 110:
―Paralogisms‖ section. 136 Desp
- Page 111 and 112:
the Selbstsetzungslehre. In this re
- Page 113 and 114:
Not being able to be thought by the
- Page 115 and 116:
This connection between the single
- Page 117 and 118:
it concerns the possibility of the
- Page 119 and 120:
perspective of its relation to the
- Page 121 and 122:
apperception and b) the synthetic o
- Page 123 and 124:
and the section ―On the Paralogis
- Page 125 and 126:
synthetic determination of its intu
- Page 127 and 128:
on the possibility of attaching the
- Page 129 and 130:
distinguished from this ―I‖). 1
- Page 131 and 132:
object. 177 The consciousness of my
- Page 133 and 134:
doctrine. One finds, in fact, that
- Page 135 and 136:
perspective, contained analytically
- Page 137 and 138:
an inference: [...] 186 The first s
- Page 139 and 140:
this follows from the fact that for
- Page 141 and 142:
feeling can be said to be a form of
- Page 143 and 144:
that of which we are conscious as o
- Page 145 and 146:
true, the nature of intuition concr
- Page 147 and 148:
This formulation of the ―I am‖
- Page 149 and 150:
Chapter Four: The Ontological Level
- Page 151 and 152:
of identity, the analytic containme
- Page 153 and 154:
there Kant nevertheless asks: ―An
- Page 155 and 156:
objectification and ―I am‖ as V
- Page 157 and 158:
The first synthetic act of consciou
- Page 159 and 160:
introducing a different field of de
- Page 161 and 162:
where the earlier indeterminate emp
- Page 163 and 164:
What is given first to the power of
- Page 165 and 166:
epresentation that was given prior
- Page 167 and 168:
outside itself, which it can then d
- Page 169 and 170:
ground that can accommodate the exp
- Page 171 and 172:
These passages by no means say the
- Page 173 and 174:
sensible‖ (as Deleuze would phras
- Page 175 and 176:
schematization. What that is like w
- Page 177 and 178:
from which the ―I think‖ gains
- Page 179 and 180:
The path taken to arrive at a basic
- Page 181 and 182:
As seen in chapter four, the relati
- Page 183 and 184:
In so far as the Selbstsetzungslehr
- Page 185 and 186:
MAN that, indeed, no science unders
- Page 187 and 188:
medical doctors, educators, and phy
- Page 189 and 190:
the grounding of the human sciences
- Page 191 and 192:
______ ―Metaphysical Foundations
- Page 193 and 194:
S. Harris. Revised Edition. Indiana
- Page 195 and 196:
Critique of Pure Reason. Chicago, U
- Page 197:
187