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KANTS CONCEPTION OF GOD A CRITICAL EXPOSITION OF ITS METAPHYSICAL
DEVELOPMENT TOGETHER WITH A TRANSLATION OF THE NOVA DILUCIDATIO BY
F. E. England, M. A., PH. D. WITH A FOREWORD BY Professor G. Dawes
Hicks Es ist durchaus noting, class man sich vorn Dascin Gottcs
iibcrzeuge cs ist abcr nicht ebcn so nothig, dass man cs
demonstrire. KANT LONDON GEORGE ALLEN 6 UNWIN LTD FIRSi PUBLISHED
IN IQ29 All tights reserved PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN BY UNWIN
BROTHERS LTD., WOKING PREFATORY NOTE THIS essay is an attempt to
follow critically the development of Kants metaphysical thought
with special reference to the concept of God, a concept which
furnishes a sort of vantage ground from which to -estimate tM6
significance of the changes in Kants philosophical outlook, while
itself re maining throughout substantially the same in content. I
shall try to show that in his recoil from the speculative
metaphysics of the Wolffian school Kant continued to conceive of
the universe, after the manner of Leibniz, r as consisting of
substances whose reciprocal commercium was made possible through
their common origin as essences in the being of God. After tracing
briefly the gradual emer gence of those considerations which
ultimately led to the critical position, I shall try to show that
by viewing epistemology as a species of logic Kant was led to a
confused exposition of the critical doctrine of judgment, and in
particular of the function of the categories. There upon I shall
endeavour to make clear that from the critical premises rightly
construed, the subjectivism characteristic of one trend of Kants
thought does not follow, and that what has been called his
phenomenalism must be seriously qualified. Thecategories will not,
that is to say, evince themselves as constitutive of objects, but
as principles of interpretation, and the critical theory of
knowledge will not render metaphysics impossible Kant himself
declared 3 that the transcendental philosophy had for its object
the founding of metaphysics, but prepare the ground for a new meta
physics. Turning to the concept of God in the critical period, I
shall seek to justify the position that Kants artificial deduction
of the Ideal of pure reason and his general 1 Kant was influenced
but little by Spinozas philosophy. See Was heisst sich im Denken
orientiren and cp. Kantstudien, Bd. V, S. 291. Fortschrittc der
Afetaplysik, Hart., VIII. 533. Cp. Logik, Ber. IX. 32. 8 KANTS
CONCEPTION OF GOD formulation of the problem of the unconditioned
are really of minor importance, but that there is implied in the
critical doctrine as a whole the conception of a necessary ground
of the world of experience, that the idea of the unconditioned is
logically prior to and involved in the notion of the con ditioned.
Further, I shall contend that the purposivcness which admittedly is
displayed in the organic realm is unintelligible unless the
mechanism of nature be grounded in a supreme intelligence, and that
finally the facts of the moral life, and in particular that of
moral obligation, presuppose a moral order, and this in turn
presupposes a supreme moral Personality as its ground. In
conclusion, I shall venture to argue that the Ideas of reason, in
so far as they are valid, are not properly described as heuristic
fictions, as Kant was prone to describe them, but are at their own
level involved in the progressive systematisation of experience.
Ideas andcategories arc alike metaphysically knowable, and the
supreme test of their validity is their indispensability. The Idea
of the uncon ditioned is shown by Kant to be indispensably involved
in experience, and it was, I shall urge, largely because Kants
judgment was influenced by a lingering adherence to the formalism
of Wolffs logical school and to the crude psy chology of his clay
that his transcendentalism was not ex tended over the entire field
of experience, and the Idea of the unconditioned was not accepted
as a valid metaphysical principle...
This is a new release of the original 1930 edition.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
KANTS CONCEPTION OF GOD A CRITICAL EXPOSITION OF ITS METAPHYSICAL
DEVELOPMENT TOGETHER WITH A TRANSLATION OF THE NOVA DILUCIDATIO BY
F. E. England, M. A., PH. D. WITH A FOREWORD BY Professor G. Dawes
Hicks Es ist durchaus noting, class man sich vorn Dascin Gottcs
iibcrzeuge cs ist abcr nicht ebcn so nothig, dass man cs
demonstrire. KANT LONDON GEORGE ALLEN 6 UNWIN LTD FIRSi PUBLISHED
IN IQ29 All tights reserved PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN BY UNWIN
BROTHERS LTD., WOKING PREFATORY NOTE THIS essay is an attempt to
follow critically the development of Kants metaphysical thought
with special reference to the concept of God, a concept which
furnishes a sort of vantage ground from which to -estimate tM6
significance of the changes in Kants philosophical outlook, while
itself re maining throughout substantially the same in content. I
shall try to show that in his recoil from the speculative
metaphysics of the Wolffian school Kant continued to conceive of
the universe, after the manner of Leibniz, r as consisting of
substances whose reciprocal commercium was made possible through
their common origin as essences in the being of God. After tracing
briefly the gradual emer gence of those considerations which
ultimately led to the critical position, I shall try to show that
by viewing epistemology as a species of logic Kant was led to a
confused exposition of the critical doctrine of judgment, and in
particular of the function of the categories. There upon I shall
endeavour to make clear that from the critical premises rightly
construed, the subjectivism characteristic of one trend of Kants
thought does not follow, and that what has been called his
phenomenalism must be seriously qualified. Thecategories will not,
that is to say, evince themselves as constitutive of objects, but
as principles of interpretation, and the critical theory of
knowledge will not render metaphysics impossible Kant himself
declared 3 that the transcendental philosophy had for its object
the founding of metaphysics, but prepare the ground for a new meta
physics. Turning to the concept of God in the critical period, I
shall seek to justify the position that Kants artificial deduction
of the Ideal of pure reason and his general 1 Kant was influenced
but little by Spinozas philosophy. See Was heisst sich im Denken
orientiren and cp. Kantstudien, Bd. V, S. 291. Fortschrittc der
Afetaplysik, Hart., VIII. 533. Cp. Logik, Ber. IX. 32. 8 KANTS
CONCEPTION OF GOD formulation of the problem of the unconditioned
are really of minor importance, but that there is implied in the
critical doctrine as a whole the conception of a necessary ground
of the world of experience, that the idea of the unconditioned is
logically prior to and involved in the notion of the con ditioned.
Further, I shall contend that the purposivcness which admittedly is
displayed in the organic realm is unintelligible unless the
mechanism of nature be grounded in a supreme intelligence, and that
finally the facts of the moral life, and in particular that of
moral obligation, presuppose a moral order, and this in turn
presupposes a supreme moral Personality as its ground. In
conclusion, I shall venture to argue that the Ideas of reason, in
so far as they are valid, are not properly described as heuristic
fictions, as Kant was prone to describe them, but are at their own
level involved in the progressive systematisation of experience.
Ideas andcategories arc alike metaphysically knowable, and the
supreme test of their validity is their indispensability. The Idea
of the uncon ditioned is shown by Kant to be indispensably involved
in experience, and it was, I shall urge, largely because Kants
judgment was influenced by a lingering adherence to the formalism
of Wolffs logical school and to the crude psy chology of his clay
that his transcendentalism was not ex tended over the entire field
of experience, and the Idea of the unconditioned was not accepted
as a valid metaphysical principle...
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