Philosophy of Immanuel Kant
Philosophy of Immanuel Kant
Philosophy of Immanuel Kant
General Notions
On the other hand, Empiricism had failed in its endeavor to prove the
existence of the world of nature distinct from thought, and had lost itself in
Skepticism. This failure of Rationalism and Empiricism was but the logical
outcome of the phenomenalism upon which both were based -- that is, the
teaching that man does not know things (reality), but only
the appearances which these things produce in us.
These varied examples of human activity comprise what Kant called his
"Copernican Revolution," which may be summed up as follows: That which
man must know, do and believe finds its justification not in reality existing
in itself (noumenon), as traditional metaphysics held, but in the theoretical,
practical and aesthetic faculties of man. A knowledge of the activities of
these faculties is, according to Kant, the necessary preparation for all
metaphysics. (The term "noumenon" is hardly translatable. It is taken to
mean the "res in se" -- Kant's "Ding-an-sich" -- the thing in itself, or the
object, as opposed to the phenomenon, the subjective effect produced in our
consciousness.)
The resulting doubts found their expression in the work The Dreams of a
Visionary Illustrated with the Dreams of Metaphysics, which Kant wrote
in 1766. The visionary of whom he spoke was the Swedish metaphysician
Swedenborg, whose teachings were the subject of much heated discussion at
that time. Named to the chair of Logic and Metaphysics at the University of
Konigsberg in 1779, Kant inaugurated his course of lectures with the
dissertation De mundi sensibilis atque intelligibilis formis et principiis, in
which he shows for the first time his tendency to adopt an independent
system of philosophy.
However, it was not until ten years later that his "pre-critical" period was
brought to a close. In 1781 Kant emerged as the exponent of transcendental
criticism with the publication of his first Critique. The "critical period" thus
begun endured until 1794. Following his publication of certain religious
works which were at variance with the principles of traditional Christianity,
Kant received orders from King Frederick William II enjoining him to
abstain from further concern about religious matters in his teaching and
writing. Kant submitted to the royal command.
Retired from teaching on account of age and infirmity, Kant spend his last
years in reediting his works. He died in his native city on February 28, 1804.
Empiricism, on the other hand, had sought a solution to the same question
by beginning with sense impresssions, which it declared to be copies of the
object perceived and hence valid for a knowledge of the world of nature.
However, it had not succeeded in demonstrating the universality and
necessity of such knowledge. Every perception, even though multiplied ad
infinitum, remains always particular. This criticism, advanced by Hume,
can be regarded as conclusive. In order to evade this difficulty, Hume had
recourse to a new psychological element, the habit of association, which
connects impressions with one another and clothes them with universality
and necessity. However, it might be observed that if the intellect can link
phenomena to one another and give them the notes of universality and
necessity, such an intellect is no "tabula rasa," as Hume asserted it to be; it
evidently possesses the innate concept of universality and necessity, which
it attributes to the particular phenomena when it links them together in
groups or classes.
Through these two elements the benefits of Rationalism and Empiricism are
united in the same judgment: the form represents the universal and
necessary element, while the matter represents the empirical data. The
judgment thus resulting (synthetic a priori) is universal and necessary in
virtue of the form, and valid for the empirical world in virtue of the matter.
It is to be noted that for the formation of a synthetic a priori judgment it is
necessary to have both elements: Form without matter is empty and void;
matter without form is blind.
1. Transcendental Aesthetic
Now, for Kant, space and time are not realities existing in themselves, as
Newton believed, nor are they realities coming from experience, as Aristotle
maintained. They are, instead, a priori forms, that is, exigencies of our
knowledge. Sense knowledge (pure intuition) carries within itself the
following exigencies; Every sensation must be located inspace, i.e., above
or beneath, to the right or to the left, and in time, that is, antecedent,
subsequent, or concomitant to other sensations. Hence space and time are
conditions, not of the existence of things but of the possibility of their being
manifested in us. In a word, they are subjective forms.
Now, arithmetic and geometry are based on space and time. Consequently,
they are based on subjective forms, and the universality and necessity we
find in them come through these subjective forms. In other words, arithmetic
and geometry are absolute sciences, not because they represent a universal
and necessary aspect of the physical world but because they are a priori
constructions of the human spirit and receive from it there universality and
necessity.
2. Transcendental Analytic
The pure intuitions of time and space give us a manifold but disorganized
knowledge of nature. The human spirit, which tends to the unification of
knowledge, cannot stop at these confused intuitions. It feels impelled to
progress to a higher degree of understanding which is centered in the
intellect and whose activity consists in organizing the sensible data
dispersed in space and time. This is possible through the a priori forms or
categories with which the intellect is endowed. The function of such forms
or categories is the following:
The categories of the intellect are twelve, and are divided by Kant into four
classes -- quantity, quality, relations, and modes. These categories, by
giving permanence and necessity to sensible data, serve as a framework in
reference to which the mechanical laws of nature are understood. It is
likewise to be noted that this permanent unification of sensible data is
possible only on condition that the unifying intellect remains identical with
itself. If the intellect be diverse for every sensible datum, no permanent
unification would be possible. Hence the universality and objectivity of
science imply the permanence of the intellect in its identity.
3. Transcendental Dialectic
The personal ego, the world, and God (the supreme realities of traditional
metaphysics), are called noumena, i.e., realities in themselves,
suprasensible and unconditioned beings. Kant presents these three entities in
the Transcendental Dialectic, the third part of the Critique of Pure
Reason.
The first two antinomies (the opposition existing between a finite and
infinite universe and between divisible and indivisible matter) pertain to the
physical world. According to Kant, they not correspond to the "thing in
itself" (noumenon), for they consist in an illegitimate application of the
categories of space and time to the "thing in itself." In other words, in these
two antinomies the physical world is considered at the same time as a "thing
in itself" independent of the mechanical necessity of nature (space and time)
and as a subject of this same mechanical necessity. Any opposition derived
from this contradictory position is necessarily false.
The other two antinomies are concerned, the first with the spirit (freedom),
the second with God; and they may be true from the noumenical and the
phenomenal point of view. Indeed, there will be the same contradiction as
noted above, if freedom and God are conceived of as beings subject to
mechanical causality. But the spirit and God may be affirmed without any
consideration of space and time; and in this case the theses of the two
antinomies do not imply any contradiction.
Thus the theses are true if they are affirmed simply from the noumenal point
of view; likewise the antitheses are true if they are affirmed simply from the
phenomenal point of view. Hence Kant concludes his criticism, leaving the
door open for the affirmation of the existence of spirit and God. However, it
has to be noted that such a conclusion cannot be called true knowledge,
because it is not based on any intuition; for Kant intuition alone gives origin
to true knowledge. Later we shall see that Kant affirms the existence of
spirit and of God as postulates of practical reason.
Finally, in reference to the idea of God, Kant reduces the arguments which
rational theology brought forward to prove the existence of God to the
following:
Thus the Critique of Pure Reason concludes that our knowledge does not
attain metaphysical realities (noumena). Kant does not deny the existence of
God and of the external world, nor the immortality of the soul; but he says
that such entities are closed to scientific inquiry. This latter has the
phenomenal world as its object, and is utterly incapable of penetrating the
supra-phenomenal world, i.e., the world of the noumena, the unconditioned.
According to Kant, God, the world and the soul are attainable through
another activity, practical reason, which we shall now examine.
In the Critique of Pure Reason Kant makes the essential elements of all
knowledge (universality and necessity) dependent, not on the content of
experience, but on a priori forms. Likewise, in the Critique of Practical
Reason he makes the universality and necessity of the moral law dependent,
not on the empirical act and the end that we might intend in our actions, but
on a categorical imperative, in the will itself. For an act to be morally
good, the will must be autonomous; it must be determined to act, not in
view of the result of its action but only in view of its duty. "Duty for
duty's sake": this is Kantian morality in all its rigidity. This means that
among all the imperatives that can determine the will to action it is
necessary to distinguish the hypothetical from the categorical.
For example, the command "Do not lie" is determined, not because people
do not lie (empirical element), but because this command comes from the
will itself as the regulator of the empirical element. The will is an
autonomous legislator in the field of action. "So act," says one of the
Kantian categorical imperatives, "that your will can be considered as
instituting a universal moral legislation." But if we act thus, we are already
in the suprasensible and unconditioned world. This conclusion deserves
examination.
Once having attained the world of the suprasensible (note well: through
practical exigency, not by way of cognitive reason), Kant undertook to
examine what might be the postulates (necessary conditions) that make
morality possible. In this investigation Kant maintains that there are three
postulates that establish morality, namely, liberty, theimmortality of the
soul, God. These are the three supreme realities of traditional philosophy;
and Kant, who had denied our ability to attain them through theoretical
knowledge, believed that he could affirm their existence by practical
exigency.
Thus Kant believed not only that he had reconstructed the world of
traditional metaphysics but also that he had established it on a more solid
basis, on a foundation above and beyond any doubt. For Kant, the will has
primacy over the intellect.
"Critique of Judgment"
1. Teleological Judgment
Kant extends this view to the whole of nature and sees it culminating in the
advent of spirituality, which is to be attained through culture and
civilization, technical abilities and moral education. This teleological view,
in which we consider the world of beings and of events as ordained to an
end and ultimately to our spiritual exigencies, finds its reason in sentiment
and not in the intellect. As in the Critique of Practical Reason, the solution
is found in an exigency of the unconditioned, and not in the knowledge of
the unconditioned.
2. Aesthetic Judgment
Conclusion
The only true and proper knowledge, for Kant, is that which is scientific,
i.e., that obtained through the categories of the intellect, whose office is to
organize sensible data according to their mechanical succession. Ideal
reality (noumenon), God, the immortality of the soul, the external world are
not objects of sensible intuition, and hence are not objects of that knowledge
which is proper to the intellect.
Without doubt, for Kant, the existence of the suprasensible, God, and the
immortality of the soul are absolutely certain; it is their conceptual
determination that is impossible. For this reason, Kant was forced to
demonstrate their existence as postulated by practical reason and as
an exigency of faculties operating in the sphere of finality and of aesthetics.
But once a true and proper understanding of the existence of God and of the
soul is denied, who can assure us that the postulates and the exigencies of
which Kant speaks so eloquently are not mere illusions of the subject? Will
it not appear more logical to present the subject, the human spirit, as creator
and absolute legislator, and then derive all reality from man by logical
deduction?
This is the trend that has gradually followed Kantian Criticism, and for this
reason Kant is without doubt the father of modern Idealism.