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  1. Kant’s Emergence and Sellarsian Cognitive Science.Richard McDonough - 2014 - Open Journal of Philosophy 4 (1):44-53.
  • On the antinomies and the appendix to the dialectic in Kant's critique and philosophy of science.Peter Krausser - 1988 - Synthese 77 (3):375 - 401.
  • Causality and things in themselves.Kent Baldner - 1988 - Synthese 77 (3):353 - 373.
    In this paper I examine Kant''s use of causal language to characterize things in themselves. Following Nicholas Rescher, I contend that Kant''s use of such causal language can only be understood by first coming to grips with the relation of things in themselves to appearances. Unlike Rescher, however, I argue that things in themselves and appearances are not numerically distinct entities. Rather, I claim that it is things in themselves that we are intentionally related to in veridical experience, though of (...)
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  • Imprints of the thing in itself : Li Zehou's critique of critical philosophy and the historicization of the transcendental.Ady Van den Stock - 2020 - Asian Studies-Azijske Studije 8 (1).
    Kant's concept of the "thing in itself" constitutes a formidable challenge to the project of "historical ontology" with which the name of Li Zehou has become synonymous. Li's radical reinterpretation of Kant's critical philosophy, which locates the conditions of the possibility of knowledge and experience within historical and social evolution and thus seeks to allow for a form of human self-determination, brings us face to face with the dose relation between the epistemological/ontological and normative dimensions of the notion of the (...)
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  • One and many: rethinking John Hick's pluralism.Yen-Yi Lee - 2012 - Dissertation, University of Birmingham
    As its criticisms have revealed, a closer look at the concept of the Real, the thesis of “all experiencing is experiencing-as,” and the criterion of the soteriological transformation have shown some difficulities in John Hick’s pluralistic hypothesis. Focusing on the theory of religious experience contended by Hick, this research explores the Kantian and Wittgensteinian elements of his hypothesis to ease the tension between its metaphysical and epistemological aspects. Since Hick’s hypothesis is based on the doctrines of religions within the Indo-European (...)
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