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Kant, Immanuel

Kant, Immanuel, 1724-1804, German philosopher, one of the greatest figures
in the history of metaphysics.
After 1755 he taught at the Univ. of Konigsberg and achieved wide renown
through his teachings and writings. According to Kant, his reading of
David Hume woke him from his dogmatic
slumber and led him to become the "critical philosopher," synthesizing
the rationalism of Leibniz and the skepticism
of Hume. Kant proposed that objective reality is known only insofar as
it conforms to the essential structure of the knowing mind. Only objects
of experience, phenomena, may be known, whereas things lying beyond experience,
noumena, are unknowable, even though in some cases we assume a priori
knowledge of them. The existence of such unknowable "things-in-themselves"
can be neither confirmed nor denied, nor can they be scientifically demonstrated.
Therefore, as Kant showed in the Critique of Pure Reason (1781), the great
problems of metaphysics -- the existence of God, freedom, and immortality
-- are insoluble by scientific thought. Yet he went on to state in the
Critique of Practical Reason (1788) that morality requires belief in their
existence. Kant's Ethics centers in his categorical imperative, or absolute
moral law, "Act as if the maxim from which you act were to become through
your will a universal law." His Critique of Judgment (1790) considered
the concepts of beauty and purposiveness as a bridge between the sensible
and the intelligible worlds. Kant's influence on modern philosophy has
continued to the present day. His work fostered the development of German
idealism
by Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel.
The Neo-Kantianism of the late 19th cent. applied his insights to the
study of the physical sciences (Hermann Cohen, Ernst Cassirer), and to
the historical and cultural sciences (Heinrich Rickert); his influence
is also seen in the thought of Dilthey; in the pragmatism of John
Dewey and William James; in the theology of Schleiermacher; and in
gestalt psychology.
From the Concise Columbia Encyclopedia. Copyright © 1991 by Columbia
University Press.
Works on ILTweb
Kant. Critique of Pure Reason. (.txt-only
version, HTML version to come.)
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