search for books and compare prices
Tables of Contents for Kant and the Capacity to Judge
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Acknowledgments
xi
 
Note on Sources and Abbreviations
xiii
 
Introduction
3
14
PART ONE: THE GUIDING THREAD
Synthesis and Judgment
17
18
Representation and Object of Representation
18
8
The ``Logical Use of the Understanding'' and the Categories
26
4
Synthesis
30
3
Synthesis and Judgment: The Two Paths of the Transcendental Deduction of the Categories
33
2
The ``Threefold Synthesis'' and the Mathematical Model
35
24
The ``Synthesis of Apprehension in Intuition''
36
2
The ``Synthesis of Reproduction in a Representation of Imagination''
38
6
The ``Synthesis of Recognition in a Concept''
44
4
Concept and Object: The Concept as Rule
48
4
The Transcendental Unity of Self-Consciousness and the Categories
52
4
Objective Deduction and Subjective Deduction: Kant's Rewriting of the Transcendental Deduction of the Categories
56
3
The Transition to Judgment
59
22
Synthesis: A Function of the Understanding?
61
3
The Kantian ``Cogito''
64
5
The ``I think'' and the Object: Logical Forms of Judgment and Transcendental Syntheses of Imagination
69
12
PART TWO: THE LOGICAL FORMS OF JUDGMENT AS FORMS OF REFLECTION
Logical Definitions of Judgment
81
26
Judgment as ``The Manner in Which Given Cognitions Are Brought to the Objective Unity of Apperception''
82
3
Judgment as ``Representation of the Unity of the Consciousness of Various Representations,'' or Concept Subordination
85
8
Judgment as a Rule, and the Different Types of Relation in Judgment
93
14
How Discursive Understanding Comes to the Sensible Given: Comparison of Representations and Judgment
107
24
Comparing
111
4
Concept Formation through ``Comparison, Reflection, and Abstraction''
115
7
Comparison/Reflection/Abstraction and the Comparison of Concepts in Judgment
122
6
Some Difficulties with Kant's List of Concepts of Comparison
128
3
Concepts of Comparison, Forms of Judgment, Concept Formation
131
36
``Identity'' and ``Difference'' of Representations, ``Quantity'' of Judgments
132
4
``Agreement'' and ``Conflict'' of Concepts, ``Quality'' of Judgments
136
4
``Inner'' and ``Outer'', and ``Relation'' in Judgment
140
7
``Matter'' and ``Form'', and Modalities of Judgment
147
16
The Unity of the Critique of Pure Reason and the Critique of Judgment
163
4
Judgments of Perception and Judgments of Experience
167
44
Judgments of Perception and Judgments of Experience in the Prolegomena: From the Mere ``Logical Connection of Perceptions'' to Subsumption under the Categories
170
10
Judgment in Section 19 of the Critique
180
8
Judgments of Perception and Judgments of Experience in the Logic: From Uncriticized Objectifications to their Corrections
188
7
Discursive Judgments and Sensible Syntheses: And the Third Critique, Again
195
16
PART THREE: SYNTHESIS INTELLECTUALIS, SYNTHESIS SPECIOSA: TRANSCENDENTAL IMAGINATION AND THE FOUNDATION OF THE SYSTEM OF PRINCIPLES
Synthesis Speciosa and Forms of Sensibility
211
32
Synthesis Speciosa and Kant's Completion of the Transcendental Deduction of the Categories
212
16
Synthesis Speciosa, Outer Sense, Inner Sense
228
15
The Primacy of Quantitative Syntheses
243
49
Preliminary Remarks: Synthesis Speciosa and Schematism of the Pure Concepts of Understanding
243
4
Quantities of Judgment, Schemata, and Categories of Quantity
247
27
How Is Pure Mathematics Possible? Kant's Principle of the Axioms of Intuition
274
18
The Real as Appearance: Imagination and Sensation
292
32
Logical Forms and Categories of Quality
292
6
Reality, Negation, and Limitation in Appearance: Sensation and Imagination
298
12
``The Schema of Reality, as the Quantity of Something Insofar as It Fills Time'' and the Principle of Intensive Magnitudes
310
14
The Constitution of Experience
324
70
Subject and Predicate, Substance and Accident, Permanent and Transitory
325
20
Ground and Consequence, Cause and Effect, Anterior and Posterior
345
30
Logical Disjunction, Simultaneity, Community
375
19
Conclusion The Capacity to Judge and ``Ontology as Immanent Thinking''
394
7
Bibliography
401
8
Index
409
6
Index of Citations of Kant's Works
415