£67.15

Springer A Copernican Critique of Kantian Idealism

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£67.83 £62.43 £63.61 £64.79 £65.96 £67.14 £68.32 08 July 2024 07 December 2024 08 May 2025 07 October 2025 08 March 2026

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78 days 92 days 206 days 224 days · current 9 days 0 56 112 168 224 £63 £65 £66 £67 £68 Days at Price

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Most common price: £67 (224 days, 36.8%)

Price range: £63 - £68

Price levels: 5 different prices over 609 days

Description

This book offers a comprehensive critique of the Kantian principle that ‘objects conform to our cognition’ from the perspective of a Copernican world–view which stands diametrically opposed to Kant’s because founded on the principle that our cognition conforms to objects. Concerning both Kant’s ontological denial in respect of space and time and his equivalence thesis in respect of ‘experience’ and ‘objectivity’, Ryall argues that Kant’s transcendental idealism signally fails to account for the one thing that is essential for Copernicus and the only thing that would validate a comparison between his and Kant’s critical philosophy, namely the subject as ‘revolving object’. It is only by presupposing – in a transcendentally realistic sense – that human beings exist as physical things in themselves, therefore, that the ‘observer motion’ of Copernican theory is vindicated and the distorted nature of our empirical observations explained. In broadly accessible prose and by directly challenging the arguments of many stalwart defenders of Kant including Norman Kemp Smith, Henry E. Allison and Michael Friedman, Ryall’s book will be of interest to both scholars and students of Kant’s philosophy alike.

Product Specifications

Format
hardcover
Domain
Amazon UK
Release Date
02 October 2017
Listed Since
09 March 2017

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