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Transcendent. That which goes beyond some boundary. Contrasted with immanent, that which remains within a boundary. The limits Kant had in mind are those of possible experience. Principles and the use of ideas (pure concepts of reason) may be transcendent.

"Let us call the principles whose application keeps altogether within the limits of possible experience immanent principles, and those that are to fly beyond these limits transcendent principles" (A295-6/B352).

"Hence objective use of the pure concepts of reason is always transcendent, whereas objective use of the pure concepts of understanding must by its nature always be immanent, because it limits itself to possible experience alone" (A327/B383)