Synopses & Reviews
Jay Rosenberg introduces Immanuel Kant's masterwork, the Critique of Pure Reason, from a "relaxed" problem-oriented perspective which treats Kant as an especially insightful practicing philosopher, from whom we still have much to learn, intelligently and creatively responding to significant questions that transcend his work's historical setting. Rosenberg's main project is to command a clear view of how Kant understands various perennial problems, how he attempts to resolve them, and to what extent he succeeds. At the same time the book is an introduction to the challenges of reading the text of Kant's work and, to that end, selectively adopts a more rigorous historical and exegetical stance. Accessing Kant will be an invaluable resource for advanced students and for any scholar seeking Rosenberg's own distinctive insights into Kant's work.
Review
"It would be hard to imagine a more elegant point of entry into the rich interpretative tradition Accessing Kant so ably advocates."--Eric Entrican Wilson, Journal of the History of Philosophy
Table of Contents
Introduction: Two ways to encounter Kant
1. Intelligibility: From Direct Platonism to Concept Empiricism
2. Epistemic Legitimacy: Experiential Unity, First Principles, and Strategy K
3. The World from a Point of View: Space and Time
4. Concepts and Categories: Transcendental Logic and the Metaphysical Deduction
5. Perceptual Synthesis: From Sensations to Objects
6. Schemata and Principles: From Pure Concepts to Objects
7. Synchronic Manifolds: The Axioms and Anticipations
8. Diachronic Manifolds: The Analogies of Experience
9. Duration and Persistence: Substance in the Analogies
10. Succession and Simultaneity: Causation in the Analogies
11. The World as Actual: The Postulates and the Refutation of Idealism
12. The Thinking Self as an Idea of Reason: The Paralogisms
13. Reason in Conflict with Itself: A Brief Look at the Antinomies
Epilogue: The Rest of the First Critique