Kant on the hierarchy of human knowledge
Note 13. To the Subsection “The Stage of Understanding and the Stage of Reason”
Примітка 13. До розділу “2.3.1. Стадія розсудку та раціональна стадія“
Kant wrote, “All our knowledge starts with the senses, proceeds from thence to understanding, and ends with reason, beyond which there is no higher faculty to be found in us…. Reason, like understanding, can be employed in a merely formal, that is, logical manner, wherein it abstracts from all content of knowledge.” Critique of Pure Reason, trans. Kemp Smith (London: The Macmillan Press Ltd., 1950), 300.
Note
- Hegel on God’s Eternal Essence in Logic
- Hegel on pure being and the beginning of logic
- The Absolute Idea: Abstract vs. Actual in Hegel’s philosophy
- Engels on the limitations of formal logic
- Stalin on language and superstructure
- Terasawa on the unfilled need for a materialist dialectical logic
- Kant on the hierarchy of human knowledge
- Hegel on the abstract nature of being and nothingness
- Akira Seto on the difficulties in the debate on logic
- The circular nature of Hegel’s Philosophy: Beginning and end as one