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57 pages 1 hour read

Immanuel Kant

Critique of Pure Reason

Immanuel KantNonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 1781

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Part II: “Transcendental Logic,” Book II, Chapters I-IIChapter Summaries & Analyses

Transcendental Doctrine of Elements

Part II: Transcendental Logic, Book II: Analytic of Principles, Introduction - Chapter I Summary

Kant transitions to Book II of the “Transcendental Analytic,” the “Analytic of Principles.” Book I dealt primarily with categories of understanding. Now Kant turns to the other fundamental aspect of understanding: the power of judgment. Through an analysis of the principles of judgment, Kant will complete a “canon” of understanding, which includes all its fundamental and basic components and excludes the illusions of reason. Judgment is a unique ability. Some people are better at making judgments than others, though all are equally equipped with the categories of pure understanding. Kant writes that this portion of the transcendental analytic will be divided into two chapters. The first deals with “the schematism of pure understanding” and the second with the principles of understanding.

The so-called “schematism” explains how objects of experience come to be identified with particular concepts. To do this, diverse objects must be made homogenous, or the same as one another, so they can be grouped under one concept. The schematism should show how the concepts of understanding are “applied to appearances as such” (210). Kant makes a distinction between the schema and the schematism. The schema is given by the objects of sensation.

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