Realism and objective knowledge
pp. 203-251
Abstrakt
"It remains a scandal to philosophy and to human reason", Kant complains, "that the existence of things outside us ... must be accepted only by faith ..." (KRV, B xl (a)). The expression "outside us", however, is "unavoidably ambiguous in meaning, sometimes signifying what as thing in itself exists apart from us, and sometimes what belongs solely to outer appearance" (A 373). The existence of things outside us can only be established, in Kant's view, if we interpret "outside us' as meaning "that which can be experienced as external".
Publication details
Published in:
De C. Fernandes Sergio L. (1985) Foundations of objective knowledge: the relations of Popper's theory of knowledge to that of Kant. Dordrecht, Springer.
Seiten: 203-251
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-015-7704-5_7
Referenz:
De C. Fernandes Sergio L. (1985) Realism and objective knowledge, In: Foundations of objective knowledge, Dordrecht, Springer, 203–251.