Kant & Transcendental Idealism

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Kant & Transcendental Idealism HZT4U1 - Mr. Wittmann - Unit 3 - Lecture 4 Empiricists and rationalists alike are dupes of the same illusion. Both take partial notions for real parts. -Henri Bergson Enlightenment is man s release from his self- imposed tutelage. -Immanuel Kant Immanuel Kant 1

Does the Knowing Mind Shape the World? German philosopher Immanuel Kant (1724 1804) sensed that philosophy had reached a pivotal point. Kant agreed with empiricists, that our knowledge begins with the senses. But also agreed with rationalists, that the mind is a source of knowledge of universal laws. Kant developed a new view of knowledge that claims that both reason and the senses contribute to our knowledge of the world. 2

Does the Knowing Mind Shape the World? (continued) Transcendental Idealism states that the world we perceive is a world which our mind constructs by arranging the sensations into whatever structures or patterns the mind itself provides. The senses are the source of sense data which the mind arranges into the world we experience. But how they are arranged is based on the mind. Thus, the form of our knowledge of reality, derives from reason but its content comes from our senses. 3

Does the Knowing Mind Shape the World? (continued) The mind arranges everything we perceive according to its own rational rules or laws, thus, the mind recognizes these laws that govern everything we perceive. Kant argued that when the mind organizes its sense impressions into the world we know and inserts rational structures into this world. These structures are universal laws that the mind can know because the mind put these structures into the world. The mind is the source of our knowledge of how the real objects are related to each other. 4

Does the Knowing Mind Shape the World? (continued) Hume argued that scientists cannot really conclude that observed causality is true. But, Kant wanted to show that we do have real knowledge of scientific conclusions... a priori knowledge (from earlier) deducted logically without experience; rational insight (i.e. mathematics) a posteriori knowledge (from later) inducted observationally from experience; empirically verifiable (i.e. natural sciences) 5

Space,Time, and Mathematics Kant agreed with Hume that our senses bring us a chaotic multitude of ever-changing sensations (colours, smells, sounds, etc.). But Kant argued that the mind organizes these constantly changing sensations by arranging them into objects that we experience as located in space and time. Thus our knowledge of space and time does not come from experience, because our experience presupposes space and time. 6

Space,Time, and Mathematics (continued) Space and time, Kant claimed, are structures in the mind that we use to organize our many sensations. Geometry consists of the laws of space and arithmetic consists of the laws of time. So, by reasoning about the space-time structures of our minds, we can have real knowledge of the a priori universal laws of mathematics, geometry and arithmetic. Thus, reason tells us how things connect relationally & casually 7

Causality and the Unity of the Mind Kant said we perceive objects that change over time. To perceive a changing object, or an event, the mind has to collect and remember sensations, and be aware these sensations belong to the same object at different times. But to collect, remember, and be aware of sensations in this way, means that the mind is a unified awareness that endures through time. Because the mind is a unified awareness, it can know the many sensations it receives, only if it connects them all into a unified world of interrelated objects (space-time). 8

Causality and the Unity of the Mind (continued) Kant called unified awareness the transcendental unity of apperception. Because the mind is a single awareness, it can know several sensations only if they are all brought together into its single awareness of space-time. The relationship of cause and effect is 1 of 12 relationships that the mind uses when it connects its many sensations into a single unified world of interrelated objects. 9

Causality and the Unity of the Mind (continued) The mind must put causality into the world it perceives so that it can bring this unified independent world of objects into its unified mind for cognitive experience. What we see around us is a world our minds have shaped out of a multitude of sensations. But perhaps the world, as it really is in itself, is not like the world we humans experience... 10

Phenomenalism Kant s notation We can know only appearances (phenomena) We can never what is ultimately real (noumena) 11

Phenomenalism (continued) 12

Immanuel Kant Video 13

Kant s Influence Kant proposed truly revolutionized philosophy and many other philosophers who followed Kant adopted his central idea and developed it in new and excitingly different directions. For example Alexander von Humboldt Agreed that the mind constructs reality, but according to its historical, cultural, and linguistic experience. 14

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