CRITIQUE OF KANTIAN PHILOSOPHY.: CHAPTER I. The Kantian Philosophy as Doctrine of Knowledge. I. THE DOCTRINE OF PHENOMENA.--TRANSCENDENTAL IDEALISM. 1. The Origin of Phenomena. 2. The Ideality of Phenomena. II. OBJECTIONS TO THE "TRANSCENDENTAL AESTHETIC." 1. First Objection: The Relative Validity of Geometrical Axioms. 2. Second Objection: The Uncritical View of the World. III. THE DOCTRINE OF THINGS-IN-THEMSELVES. 1. The Sensuousness of Pure Reason. 2. The Thing-in-itself. CHAPTER II. The Kantian Philosophy as Doctrine of Freedom. I. KANTIAN REALISM AND IDEALISM. II. THE THING-IN-ITSELF AS WILL. 1. Intelligible Causality. 2. The Moral Order of the World. III. THE DOCTRINE OF GOD AND IMMORTALITY. 1. Kantian Theism. 2. The Kantian Doctrine of Immortality.
The Journal of Speculative Philosophy (1867-1893); St. Louis Vol. 20, Iss. 2, (Apr 1886): 150.
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