
This is a work in Kantian conceptual geography. It explores issues in analytic epistemology, philosophy of language, and metaphysics in particular by appealing to theses drawn from Immanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason. Those issues include the nature of the subjective, objective, and empirical; potential scopes of the subjective; what can (and cannot) be said about a subject-independent reality; analyticity, syntheticity, apriority, and aposteriority; constitutive principles, acquisitive principles, and empirical claims; meaning, indeterminacy, and incommensurability; logically possible versus subjectively empirical worlds; and the nature of empirical truth.Part One introduces two theses drawn from the Critique. The first, Empirical Dualism, concerns the subjective, objective, and empirical. The second, Subjective Principlism, concerns principles that might bear on the empirical. Part Two examines work of influential analytic philosophers to reveal how conceptually expansive the territory formed by Empirical Dualism and Subjective Principlism is. Part Three defends that territory by defending Empirical Dualism and Subjective Principlism themselves. Part Four discloses two new lands within the territory that have so far remained uncharted. The first is a Kantian account of meaning, which is shown to be superior to other accounts of meaning in the analytic literature. The second are Kantian thoughts on truth, which illuminate the nature of empirical truth itself. Finally Part Five shows how engaging in Kantian conceptual geography enriches epistemology, philosophy of language, and metaphysics generally.
This work investigates the intersection of analytic philosophy and Kantian thought by mapping the conceptual territory defined by Empirical Dualism and Subjective Principlism. Nathaniel Jason Goldberg, a scholar of Kantian philosophy, utilizes the framework of the Critique of Pure Reason to re-examine foundational problems in epistemology and metaphysics. By applying these specific Kantian theses to contemporary analytic discourse, the author argues that this conceptual geography provides a more robust understanding of meaning, truth, and the nature of empirical reality.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students of philosophy frequently note the high level of academic density and technical rigor present in this text. Experts highlight this work as a specialized contribution to the ongoing dialogue between historical Kantian studies and contemporary analytic epistemology.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2014-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190215399
ISBN-13:
9780190215392
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