Critique of Pure ReasonHenry G. Bohn, 1887 - 517 pages |
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Page xxvi
... properties , but that it was necessary to produce these properties , as it were , by a positive a priori construction ; and that , in order to arrive with certainty at a priori cognition , he must not attribute to the object any other ...
... properties , but that it was necessary to produce these properties , as it were , by a positive a priori construction ; and that , in order to arrive with certainty at a priori cognition , he must not attribute to the object any other ...
Page 4
... properties which mere experience has taught us to connect with it , still we cannot think away those through which we cogitate it as substance , or adhering to substance , although our conception of substance is more determined than ...
... properties which mere experience has taught us to connect with it , still we cannot think away those through which we cogitate it as substance , or adhering to substance , although our conception of substance is more determined than ...
Page 7
... properties which I think in that conception , in order to discover this predicate in it : it is therefore an ana- lytical judgment . On the other hand , when I say , " all bodies are heavy , " the predicate is something totally ...
... properties which I think in that conception , in order to discover this predicate in it : it is therefore an ana- lytical judgment . On the other hand , when I say , " all bodies are heavy , " the predicate is something totally ...
Page 25
... properties of space synthetically , and yet à priori . What , then , must be our representation of space , in order that such a cognition of it may be possible ? It must be originally intuition , for from a mere conception , no ...
... properties of space synthetically , and yet à priori . What , then , must be our representation of space , in order that such a cognition of it may be possible ? It must be originally intuition , for from a mere conception , no ...
Page 27
... properties of things , but only as changes in th subject , changes which may be different in different men . For in such a case , that which is originally a mere phænomenon , rose , for example , is taken by the empirical understanding ...
... properties of things , but only as changes in th subject , changes which may be different in different men . For in such a case , that which is originally a mere phænomenon , rose , for example , is taken by the empirical understanding ...
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Common terms and phrases
à priori absolute totality according analytical analytical proposition antinomy apperception applied argument belong causality cause ception complete connection consciousness consequently constitution contains contingent cosmological cosmological argument deduced determined dialectical discover dition dogmatical empirical conditions empirical intuition employed existence extensive quantity external follows former given ground Hence impossible inasmuch infer infinite intelligible internal sense judgment knowledge lative latter laws limits logical manifold mathematics means merely metaphysics mode moral nature necessity never nihil negativum noumena noumenon ourselves perception phæno phænomena phænomenon philosophy Portrait possess possible experience predicate present presuppose priori laws proof pure conceptions pure reason pure understanding quantity question rational psychology regard regress relation representation rience rule schema sensation sensibility sensuous intuition series of conditions space speculative reason sphere substance supreme synthesis synthetical propositions synthetical unity systematic unity term things thought tion Trans transcendental ideas truth uncon unconditioned vols world of sense
Popular passages
Page 120 - Men suffer all their life long under the foolish superstition that they can be cheated. But it is as impossible for a man to be cheated by any one but himself, as for a thing to be and not to be at the same time.