0

Kant's Notion of a Transcendental Schema

The Constitution of Objective Cognition between Epistemology and Psychology

Kann, Christoph
Erscheinungsjahr: 2020
CHF 83,15
(inkl. MwSt.)

Nicht lieferbar

In den Warenkorb
Bibliografische Daten
ISBN/EAN: 9783631804384
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 294
Format (T/L/B): 21.0 x 14.0 cm
Einband: Gebunden

Inhalt

Introduction .............................................................................................................. 15 Main objectives of the study ................................................................................... 15 Method ...................................................................................................................... 17 State of the art ........................................................................................................... 18 Structure .................................................................................................................... 20 Part I: Kant’s theory of schematism and its context ....................................... 21 1. The notion of schema before Kant .................................................................... 23 1.1 Ancient times ................................................................................................ 24 1.2 Middle Ages .................................................................................................. 26 1.3 Modern Ages ................................................................................................ 28 1.3.1 Tetens’s conception of schema ............................................................ 34 1.4 Conclusion .................................................................................................... 40 2. Kant’s pre-critical notion of schema ................................................................. 41 2.1 The metaphysical notion of schema in the Nova Dilucidatio ................. 45 2.2 The new significance of schema in the Dissertation from 1770. A first reference to the problem of objectivity ......................................... 46 2.2.1 Schema and the forms of the worlds ................................................. 47 2.2.2 The novelty of the account of space and time as schemata in the Dissertation: Comparison with Newton and Leibniz ............... 52 2.2.3 The limitations of Kant’s Dissertation and the need of a further solution to the question of objectivity .................................. 54 3. The introduction of the transcendental forms in the Critique of Pure Reason ................................................................................................................... 57 3.1 The doctrine of sensibility .......................................................................... 58 3.2 The doctrine of the understanding ............................................................ 634. Analysis of the schematism chapter ................................................................. 73 4.1 The Transcendental Doctrine of Judgement ............................................ 74 4.2 Time-mediation ........................................................................................... 78 4.3 Schemata and their faculty ......................................................................... 80 4.4 Schemata: images or concepts? .................................................................. 82 4.5 The table of schemata .................................................................................. 84 4.6 Schemata as conditions of the significance of the pure concepts .......... 89 5. Debates over the schematism chapter in Kantian scholarship ...................... 95 5.1 Main criticisms of the schematism chapter .............................................. 96 5.1.1 A redundant addition within the Critique of Pure Reason ............. 96 a) Zschocke’s focus on the Transcendental Aesthetic ..................... 96 b) Curtius: the schematism chapter and § 24 .................................. 98 5.1.2 Schematism’s obscure terminology .................................................. 100 a) Curtius: difficulties concerning the notion of subsumption .................................................................................. 100 b) Walsh: schemata and concepts .................................................... 103 c) Guyer: incongruences in the relation between categories and schemata ......................................................................... 104 d) Allison: difficulties concerning the distinctions among faculties and the variety of schemata’s definitions ............ 106 5.1.3 The priority ascribed to time over space ......................................... 109 a) Zschocke’s criticism of time as being the only mediating function .................................................................................. 109 b) Walsh’s introduction of “organic” schemata .............................. 109 c) Guyer: Schemata and temporality .............................................. 110 5.2 In response to the criticisms of the schematism chapter ...................... 113 5.2.1 The necessity of schematism in the Critique of Pure Reason ........ 113 a) The distinction between the function of the Transcendental Deduction and the task of the schematism chapter .............................................................. 113 b) “Knowing that and knowing how” ............................................. 116 5.2.2 The obscurity of the chapter ............................................................. 122 a) Subsumption .................................................................................. 122 b) “To be” and “to do”: defining schemata ..................................... 125 c) The distinction between categories and forms of intuition ..... 128 d) Categories and schemata ............................................................. 130 e) Schemata and principles .............................................................. 132 f) Schemata and ideas ....................................................................... 134 g) Judgement and its role between reason and understanding ... 138 5.2.3 Space and time .................................................................................... 141 a) Time, at least .................................................................................. 141 b) Dynamic schemata ....................................................................... 142 c) Difficulties within Kant’s text ...................................................... 142 Part II: After Kant ................................................................................................ 147 1. The philosophical reception and criticism of the schematism chapter ..... 149 1.1 The earliest receptions of Kant’s schematism chapter ........................... 150 1.2 Idealism and post-Kantianism ................................................................. 152 1.3 From the late nineteenth to the early twentieth century ...................... 159 2. Kant’s distinction between philosophy and psychology .............................. 177 2.1 Philosophy as a system of concepts ......................................................... 178 2.2 Psychology: a doctrine of the inner sense .............................................. 186 2.3 Is Kant a transcendental psychologist? ................................................... 194 3. Kant’s notion of a schema in twentieth-century psychology ...................... 201 3.1 Schema theories ......................................................................................... 201 3.2 Frederic Bartlett ......................................................................................... 206 3.2.1 A pioneer of applied psychology ...................................................... 207 3.2.2 Experimental method ........................................................................ 208 3.2.3 The topics of experiments ................................................................. 209 3.2.4 Remembering ..................................................................................... 210 3.2.5 Schematic settings .............................................................................. 2103.2.6 Meaning ............................................................................................... 214 3.2.7 Conclusion .......................................................................................... 217 3.3 Jean Piaget’s interpretation of Kant’s notion of a schema ..................... 219 3.3.1 An interest in both theoretical and empirical studies ................... 220 3.3.2 A “philosophical shock” .................................................................... 222 3.3.3 Piaget’s notion of schemata ............................................................... 224 3.3.4 An example of a schema: the object ................................................ 226 3.3.5 Experience as an organisation through schemata. Piaget’s perspective between empiricism and apriorism ............................. 232 3.3.6 Piaget’s novelty and difference from Kant’s view ........................... 234 3.4 Lawrence Barsalou’s reception of Kant’s transcendental schematism ...................................................................... 238 3.4.1 Cognitive psychology ........................................................................ 239 3.4.2 Categorisation ..................................................................................... 240 3.4.3 Modal theory versus amodal theory ................................................ 241 3.4.4 Properties ............................................................................................ 244 a) Neural representations ................................................................. 244 b) Schematic perceptual symbols .................................................... 244 c) Multimodal symbols ..................................................................... 245 d) Simulators ...................................................................................... 245 e) Frames ............................................................................................ 247 f) Linguistic indexing and control .................................................. 248 3.4.5 Barsalou and Kant .............................................................................. 249 3.4.6 Psychology and philosophy .............................................................. 250 Conclusion .............................................................................................................. 253 Schema: the history of an idea ......................................................................... 253 The function of schematism ............................................................................. 255 Schematisms’s legacy between philosophy and psychology ........................ 258 New perspectives ............................................................................................... 264Bibliography ............................................................................................................ 267 Lists of abbreviations for classical works ........................................................ 267 Primary literature .............................................................................................. 267 Secondary literature .......................................................................................... 273 Online resources ................................................................................................ 283 List of figures ........................................................................................................... 285 List of tables ............................................................................................................ 287 Index ........................................................................................................................ 289

Weitere Artikel aus der Kategorie "Philosophie"

In der Regel lieferbar innerhalb 1-3 Tagen

CHF 13,50
inkl. MwSt.

In der Regel lieferbar innerhalb 1-3 Tagen

CHF 29,50
inkl. MwSt.

In der Regel lieferbar innerhalb 1-3 Tagen

CHF 35,60
inkl. MwSt.

In der Regel lieferbar innerhalb 1-3 Tagen

CHF 29,90
inkl. MwSt.

In der Regel lieferbar innerhalb 1-3 Tagen

CHF 21,50
inkl. MwSt.

In der Regel lieferbar innerhalb 1-3 Tagen

CHF 25,80
inkl. MwSt.
Alle Artikel anzeigen