Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: 192.168.6.56/handle/123456789/76305
Title: Kantian Nonconceptualism
Authors: Schulting, Dennis
Dennis Schulting
Keywords: Nonconceptualism
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Description: One of the most frequently quoted statements from Immanuel Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason is that “thoughts without content are empty, [and] intuitions without concepts are blind” (A51/B75). Ever since John McDowell’s seminal book based on his Locke lectures, Mind and World, first published in 1994, this dictum, which can be taken as exemplifying the salient point of Kant’s epistemological argument in the Critique, has been associated with a general Kantian approach to solving issues in the theory of knowledge that concern the justification of our beliefs about the world and the possibility of perceptual knowledge. In particular, McDowell referred to it as an apt metaphor for seeing a solution to bridging any supposed gap between our mental states or beliefs and the world of sensible objects to which our beliefs must be answerable. The intertwinement of sense content (Kant’s “intuition”) and conceptuality, of which this dictum appears to speak, gives us a sense of how objects constrain our judgements, thoughts and beliefs about them, without resorting to explanations that either succumb to the Myth of the Given or rest content with a form of coherentism.
URI: http://10.6.20.12:80/handle/123456789/76305
ISBN: 978-1-137-53517-7
Appears in Collections:History

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