Kant's method of composing the "Critique of pure reason"
Kant's relation to Hume and to Leibniz
1. The nature of the a priori
2. Kant's contribution to the science of logic
3. The nature of consciousness
4. Phenomenalism, Kant's substitute for subjectivism
5. The distinction between human and animal intelligence
6. The nature and conditions of self-consciousness
7. Kant's threefold distinction between sensibility, understanding, and reason
8. The place of the "Critique of pure reason" in Kant's philosophical system
The Critique of pure reason
The transcendental doctrine of elements
Part 1. The transcendental aesthetic
Space: Kant's attitude toward the problem of modern geometry
Kant's views regarding the nature of arithmetic science
Kant's conflicting views of time
General observation between appearance and Illusion
Kant's relation to Berkeley
The paradox of incongruous counterparts.
Part 2. The transcendental logic
Div 1. The transcendental analytic
Book 1. The analytic of concepts
1. the clue to the discovery of all pure concepts of the understanding
logical use of the understanding
the logical function of the understanding in judgments
the categories of pure concepts and of the understanding
2. Deduction of he pure concepts of the understanding
The four stages in the development of Kant's views
A. Enumeration of the four stages
B. Detailed analysis of four stages
C. Evidence yielded by the "Reflexionem" and "lose blatter" in support of the analysis of the text
D. Connected statement and discussion of Kant's subjective and objective deductions in the first edition
Distinction between the subjective and the objective deductions
the subjective deduction in its initial empirical stages
objective deduction as given in the first edition
the later stages of the subjective deduction
the distinction between phenomenalism and subjectivism
transcendental deduction of the categories in the second edition
the doctrine of inner sense
Kant's refutations of idealism
Books. The analytic of principle
1. The schematism of pure concepts of the understanding
2. systems of all principles of pure understanding
the anticipations of perceptions
the postulates of empirical thought in general
3. On the ground of the distinction of all objects whatever into phenomena and nominee
relevant passages in the section on amphiboly
alterations in the second edition
comment on Kant's argument.
Div. 2. The transcendental dialectic
1. Transcendental illusion
2. Pure reason as the seat of transcendental illusion
Book 1. The concept of pure reason
2. The transcendental ideas
3. System of the transcendental ideas
Book 2. The dialectical inferences of pure reason
1. The paralogisms of pure reason
First paralogism: of substantiality
Second paralogism: of simplicity
Third paralogism: of personality
Fourth paralogism: of ideality
2. The antinomy of pure reason
System of the cosmological ideas
Antithetic of pure reason
The interest of reason in this self-conflict
Of the transcendental problems of pure reason in so far as they absolutely must be capable of solution
Sceptical representation of the cosmological questions
Transcendental idealism as the key to the solution of the cosmological dialectic
Critical decision of the cosmological conflict of reason with itself
The regulative principle of pure reason in regard to the cosmological ideas
The empirical employment of the regulative principles of reason in regard to all cosmological ideas
Solution of the first and second antinomies
Remarks on the distinction between the mathematical-transcendental and the dynamical-transcendental ideas
Comment on Kant's method of argument
Solution of the third antinomy
Possibility of harmonising causality through freedom with the universal law of natural necessity
Explanation of the relation of freedom to necessity of nature
Comment on Kant's method of argument
Solution of the fourth antinomy
Concluding note on the whole antinomy of pure reason
Concluding comment on Kant's doctrine of the antinomies
3. The ideal of pure reason
The speculative arguments in proof of the existence of a supreme being
The impossibility of an ontological proof
The impossibility of a cosmological proof of the existence of God
Comment on Kant's method of argument
Discovery and explanation of the transcendental illusion in all transcendental proof of the existence of a necessary being
Comment on Kant's method of argument
he impossibility of the physico-theological proof
Criticism of all theology based on speculative principles of reason
Appendix to the transcendental dialectic
The regulative employment of the ideas of pure reason
Hypotheses not permissible in philosophy
On the final purpose of the natural dialectic of human reason
Concluding comment on the dialectic
Appendix A. The transcendental doctrine of methods
1. The discipline of pure reason
The discipline of pure reason its dogmatic employment
The discipline of pure reason in its polemic employment
The discipline of pure reason in regard to hypotheses
The discipline of pure reason in regard to its proofs
2. The canon of pure reason
The ultimate end of the pure use of our reason
The ideal of the highest good, as a determining ground of the ultimate end of pure reason
Opining, knowing, and believing
3. The architectonic of pure reason
4. The history of pure reason
Appendix B.A more detailed statement of Kant's relations to his philosophical predecessors
Appendix C. Kant's Opus Postumum.