Kant's Critique of Pure Reason

UC Davis Philosophy 1

G. J. Mattey


Critique of Pure Reason
  • Philosophy 1
  • Spring, 2002
  • G. J. Mattey
Gottfried Willhelm Leibniz
  • Born 1646
  • From Germany
  • Invented calculus
  • Had controversies with Newton
  • Ridiculed by Voltaire
  • Died 1716
The Leibniz-Wolff Philosophy
  • Leibniz's views were modified by the German philosopher Christian Wolff
  • Kant worked within this framework in his pre-critical years
  • There are two principles governing metaphysics
    • Non-contradiction establishes what is possible
    • Sufficient reason establishes what exists
  • Both operate on the basis of pure reason
Immanuel Kant
  • Born 1724
  • Prussian, of Scottish ancestry
  • University Professor at Königsberg
  • Banned from writing on religion
  • Died 1804
Kant's Contributions
  • Wrote extensively on the physical and human sciences
  • Proposed the currently-accepted explanation of the origin of the solar system (nebular hypothesis)
  • Founder of modern geography
  • Tried to reconcile rationalism and skepticism
  • Proposed an ethical theory based on pure reason
  • Proposed a formalistic aesthetic theory
The Secure Path of Science
  • Many scientific endeavors are mere groping
  • Logic has traveled on a secure path
  • Its sole subject is the formal rules of all thought, no matter what it is about
  • As such, it is only preparatory for all the other sciences
  • Mathematics and physics are other secure sciences
A Priori Cognition
  • Thinking of objects and of concepts is called cognition
  • Cognitions are intuitions of objects, concepts, and judgments
  • Theoretical cognition concerns the relation of objects and concepts
  • Practical cognition concerns making the object actually exist
  • Theoretical cognition a priori relates objects and concepts through the use of thought alone
Revolution in Mathematics
  • Mathematics became a secure science through a revolution in thought
  • Mathematicians were merely groping when they tried to find the properties of figures in the figure itself
  • Mathematics became a science when it was seen that we know the properties of figures through construction
  • We think the properties into figures a priori
Revolution in Natural Science
  • Natural scientists were merely groping when they tried to discover the properties of objects through mere observation
  • Galileo and others showed that we must investigate nature by experiment
  • This requires that reason actively brings its conceptions to nature and tests them out
Metaphysics
  • Metaphysics is cognition of objects through concepts alone
  • For example, we seek to establish the existence of God from the concept of a most real being
  • It is not yet on the secure path of science
  • Instead, it has engendered endless dispute
  • Should we continue the search or give up our confidence in reason?
Revolution in Metaphysics
  • Metaphysics has produced concepts in the hope that they will conform to objects
  • We can reverse the field and hypothesize that objects conform to concepts
  • This reversal is like that of Copernicus
  • Concepts that are generated a priori can then apply to objects necessarily
  • All we cognize a priori about things is what we ourselves put into them
Limitations of Metaphysics
  • If the revolution in metaphysics is successful, it will limit the field of metaphysics
  • The results of metaphysics will only apply to those objects that must conform to our concepts
  • These objects will be called appearances
  • The actual thing in itself is not cognized
  • This leaves an opening to fulfill our practical concerns about what we ought to do
An Example: Freedom and Necessity
  • Metaphysics establishes that appearances are mechanically determined
  • If appearances are things in themselves, then freedom would be impossible
  • But if they are not, there is a possibility of freedom
  • I cannot cognize freedom, but I can think it
  • Freedom is required for morality, so the limitation of metaphysics is required for morality
Metaphysics and Public Interest
  • What is lost to metaphysics is of interest only to scholars
  • Philosophical proofs of Gods existence, of freedom and of immortality do not influence ordinary people
  • We believe in these things for other reasons
  • God: the order, beauty, etc., of the universe
  • Freedom: the opposition of duty and inclination
  • Immortality: dissatisfaction with a limited life
Critique
  • Reason seeks to establish its own limits
  • Critique can cut off the roots of dangerous thinking
    • Materialism
    • Fatalism
    • Atheism
    • Lack of faith
    • Fanaticism
    • Superstition
    • Idealism
    • Skepticism
Composite Cognition
  • Cognition begins with experience
  • But it does not therefore arise from experience
  • Cognition has two components
  • An a priori contribution of our cognitive power (form)
  • An a posteriori contribution from the senses (matter)
A Priori Judgments
  • An a priori judgment has two characteristics
  • Strict universality (no exceptions at all)
  • Necessity (we cannot think it without recognizing that it must be true)
  • Mathematical judgments are a priori
  • The common judgment that all change has a cause is a priori
  • So Hume's account of causal reasoning in terms of custom is incorrect
A Priori Concepts
  • Suppose you omit from an experiential concept everything that is derived from experience
  • Space with the concept of body
  • Substance with the concept of an object
  • What is left over after all omission is derived from the cognitive power
Analytic Judgments
  • Analytic judgments are the result of the clarification of our concepts
  • What is thought in the predicate of the judgment is already thought in the subject
  • Example: all bodies are extended
  • Analytic judgments are all a priori
Synthetic Judgments
  • Synthetic judgments add something in the predicate not already thought in the subject
  • They are expansive
  • Example: all bodies are heavy
  • The concept of a body does not contain that of heaviness in it
  • The connection is found in experience
A Priori Synthetic Judgments
  • Can a subject and predicate be connected synthetically without appeal to experience?
  • Example: everything that happens has a cause
  • Having a cause is not analytically contained in the concept of something that happens
  • What is the unknown X that connects them?
Summary Classification
  • Presentation
    • Sensation (presents only the modification of the subject)
    • Cognition (presents an object)
      • Intuition (presents a single directly object)
      • Concept (presents objects indirectly, through characteristics that may be common to many)
  • Judgment (connects concepts to other concepts or to intuitions)
Pure Mathematics
  • Mathematical judgments are synthetic
  • One does not think the number 12 in thinking the sum of 7 and 5
  • One does not think of the shortest distance between two points when thinking of a straight line
  • Mathematical judgments are a priori (strictly universal and necessary)
  • Then how is pure mathematics possible?
Pure Natural Science
  • General principles of natural science are synthetic
  • Example: the quantity of motion in the world is constant
  • But they are also strictly universal and necessary, and hence a priori
  • How is pure natural science possible?
Metaphysics
  • Some metaphysical judgments are synthetic
  • Example: the world must have a first beginning
  • These judgments are also necessary and universal, if they are true
  • They have been accepted dogmatically because they were thought to be analytic
  • But if they are supposed to apply beyond experience, they cannot be justified
Transcendental Philosophy
  • What is presented here is only a critique of the use of reason a priori
  • The critique is transcendental
  • It deals with our way of cognizing objects a priori
  • A system of pure reason would present synthetic a priori cognitions as a system
Intuition
  • Cognition relates to objects directly through intuition
  • Intuition takes place when and only when an object is given
  • For human beings, objects are given through a receptive faculty, sensibility
  • Thoughts of objects through concepts relate to them only through intuition
Appearance
  • Sensation is the effect of an object on the receptive faculty
  • When an intuition refers to an object through sensation it is empirical
  • An object of empirical intuition is appearance
  • Appearance has two sides
    • A matter, given in sensation
    • A form, lying in the mind a priori
Inner and Outer Sense
  • Outer sense presents objects alongside one another in space
  • Inner sense presents states of the mind as successive in time
  • What are space and time?
  • They might be:
    • Actual beings
    • Real relations among actual beings
    • Merely intuited relations among intuited objects
    • A matter, given in sensation
    • A form, lying in the mind a priori
Pure Intuition
  • The form of intuition is called pure intuition, since it is contributed by the mind alone
  • Pure intuition is separate from what the understanding thinks through concepts and what sensation contributes
  • Space is the form of intuition of bodies
  • Time is the form of all intuition
  • Transcendental aesthetic investigates them
Space
  • Space is not an empirical concept abstracted from intuitions of bodies
    • We need it to think of relations of bodies
  • Space is an a priori intuition
    • The absence of space cannot be presented
  • Space is not a universal concept
    • It is a unique thing, which is prior to its parts
    • It is an infinite given magnitude, having its parts within itself, not having infinitely many instances
Geometry
  • Geometry yields synthetic a priori judgments
    • The predicate amplifies the subject
    • They are made independently of perception of their objects
    • They are strictly universal and necessary
  • This can only be explained by space being the form of the intuition of geometric objects
  • As intuition, space unites geometrical concepts
  • As residing in the subject, it allows this unification to take place a priori
Ideality
  • Space is the form of intuition, so it applies only to objects as appearances
  • It does not apply to things in themselves
  • Space exists only from the human point of view
  • So, things in space exist only from the human point of view
  • Space and things in it are ideal
Reality
  • The ideality of space is transcendental
    • Space is only an a priori condition of intuition
  • Space is also empirically real
    • Space is a form of outer intuition for all humans
    • Objects in space are real in human experience
  • The ideality of space cannot be compared with that of sensory qualities
    • Sensory qualities are relative to individuals
Time
  • Time is an form of intuition, just as is space
  • Unlike space, time has only one dimension
  • Parts of time presuppose a single, unified time
  • Time is infinite, in the sense that any time-period is a limitation of it, so that it is unlimited
  • There can be an a priori theory of time
  • Time allows the explanation of change in general and motion in particular
Ideality and Reality
  • Like space, time is transcendentally ideal
    • Time is the form of inner sense
    • It is prior to the placement of objects in time
  • Unlike space, time is the a priori condition for all objects
    • If we present an object as in space, our presentation itself is in time
  • Things in themselves are not temporal, but time is a condition for the reality of all appearances
An Objection
  • When I present objects as in time, my mind changes its state
  • Changes in state take place in time
  • So, my presentation of objects takes place in time
  • So, time is prior to the presentation of objects in time
  • So, time is actual
A Reply
  • It is conceded that time is actual
  • It is the actual form in which objects are presented as in succession
  • But its reality is not transcendental
  • It is not an object that exists outside of the act of presenting objects
  • The fact that my presentations follow one another does not make time something in itself
Space and Time
  • Space and time are two sources of cognition
  • Appearances are necessarily subject to them
  • Because they are forms of cognition, we can understand how we can make judgments a priori about them
  • If we think of them as existing in themselves, we have to explain how two non-entities can be the condition of all objects
  • Concepts such as motion or change require experience and are not a priori
Confused Presentations?
  • Leibniz and Wolff held that sensibility is confused presentation of things in themselves
  • Only the intellect yields clear presentations (of things in themselves)
  • But this distinction is purely logical
  • The distinction between sensibility and intellect concerns the nature and origin of our cognitions
  • Sensibility provides no presentation at all of things in themselves
Intellectual Intuition
  • Human intuition is sensible and passive
  • An intellectual intuition would produce its own objects (self-actively)
  • We intuit our own mind by being passively given successive mental states in time
  • So, we do not represent ourselves as an intellectual intuition would represent us
Illusion?
  • Does the fact that outer objects and my inner state are transcendentally ideal mean that they are illusory?
  • Illusion results from taking these to be transcendentally real
  • On that assumption, we cannot explain the nature of space and time
  • This is why Berkeley downgraded bodies to illusion
  • Even the mind itself would be illusory, since its states are in time
God's Intuition
  • God cannot be an object of intuition to us or an object of self-intuition in space and time
  • If space and time were conditions for the existence of all things, they would be a condition for Gods existence
  • Then God could not cognize his own existence
  • God's intuition must be intellectual
Concept and Intuition
  • Intuitions are the result of the passive reception of sense-impressions
  • Concepts are the result of the activity of the understanding
  • Both may be empirical or pure
    • Empirical cognition has sensory elements
    • Pure cognition is free of sensory elements
  • Cognition arises only from their union
Logic
  • General logic concerns rules of thought that apply to all objects that can be thought
    • Pure general logic concerns formal rules of thought
    • Applied general logic concerns the psychology of reasoning
  • Special logic concerns rules (of methodology) applying to thought about specific kinds of objects
Transcendental Logic
  • Some thoughts about objects are pure, others are empirical
  • Pure thoughts have their origin in the understanding, rather than experience
  • A logic of pure thoughts is transcendental
  • To be transcendental is to be concerned with the fact that the origin of a presentation is a priori
  • Transcendental logic concerns concepts that arise in the mind independently of sense-experience yet are applicable to objects
Truth
  • Truth is the agreement of a cognition with the object it is supposed to present
  • There is no universal criterion of truth of material (experiential) cognition of objects
  • There is a universal criterion of truth of formal (a priori) cognition of objects
    • The understanding must be in agreement with its own activities
Analytic and Dialectic
  • Analytic is the part of logic that concerns the formal rules of its use
    • Transcendental analytic concerns the rules governing a priori concepts
    • It is a logic of the truth of a priori cognition
  • Dialectic is the attempted use of logic to establish material truths
    • Transcendental dialectic concerns the misapplication of rules governing a priori concepts
    • It is a logic of illusion
Completeness
  • Transcendental analytic presents pure concepts derived from the understanding
  • The derivation of these concepts must be based on a single principle
  • This principle should encompass the whole of the understanding
  • So, it should present a complete and coherent system of pure concepts
Functions
  • The understanding operates by making judgments connecting concepts to one another or to intuitions
  • A function is the unity of the act of bringing many presentations under one concept
  • So, judgments are functions of unity of presentations (concepts or intuitions)
  • Concepts are functions of unity of intuitions
Functions of Judgment
  • Every judgment combines presentations in four ways
    • Quantity (universal, particular, singular)
    • Quality (affirmative, negative, infinite)
    • Relation (categorical, hypothetical, disjunctive)
    • Modality (problematic, assertoric, apodeictic)
Examples of Judgments
  • The soul is not mortal (universal, negative, categorical, assertoric)
  • The world exists either through blind chance, internal necessity or external cause (singular, affirmative, disjunctive, apodeictic)
  • If there is a perfect justice, then the persistently evil person is punished (universal, affirmative, hypothetical, apodeictic)
  • The component sentences of the hypothetical and disjunctive forms may themselves be problematic
Synthesis
  • The mind is initially given a manifold of presentations
    • Space and time are a pure manifold
    • Sense-impressions are an empirical manifold
  • The imagination synthesizes the manifold
  • The understanding brings the synthesis to concepts
  • Cognition (presentation of an object) occurs when a concept is applied to the synthesis
Pure Synthesis
  • Sensibility supplies a pure manifold of intuition (spaces and times)
  • This manifold is synthesized by the imagination
  • The understanding gives unity to the pure synthesis
  • The same function that gives unity to the presentations in a judgment gives unity to pure synthesis in an intuition
The Categories
  • Categories are pure concepts which give unity to the pure synthesis
  • The system of categories parallels the system of forms of judgment
    • Quantity (unity, plurality, allness)
    • Quality (reality, negation, limitation)
    • Relation (inherence/subsistence, cause/effect, community)
    • Modality (possibility/impossibility, existence, nonexistence, necessity/contingency)
The Task Ahead
  • The table of categories serves to organize a system of metaphysical principles
  • To confirm the legitimacy of the principles, it must be shown why the categories legitimately apply to objects
  • This is the task of the "transcendental deduction"
  • Finally, in the transcendental dialectic, it is shown how the application of these principles beyond experience leads to "transcendental illusion"
Some Metaphysical Principles
  • All intuitions are extensive magnitudes (in space and time)
  • What is real in an object of sensation has a degree of intensity (of influence on our senses)
  • Substance is permanent in all change
  • All changes occur according to the law of connection of cause and effect
  • All perceivable substances in space interact in a thoroughgoing way with one another
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