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| Definition Of: |
UNDERSTANDING
[A230/B283] The source of concepts; opposed to sensibility, the source of intuitions. The human understanding limits our possible experience (and thus thought and knowledge) to discursive experience; as the source of concepts, our understanding is such that we can only think through concepts (i.e., discursively), although beings with different forms of understanding may well think differently. "The understanding, in accordance with the subjective and formal conditions of sensibility as well as of apperception, prescribes a priori to experience in general the rules which alone make experience possible. Other forms of intuition than space and time, other forms of understanding that the discursive forms of thought, or of knowledge through concepts, even if they should be possible, we cannot render in any way conceivable and comprehensible to ourselves; and even assuming that we could do so, they still would not belong to [our] experience." (Concepts as rules for combining intuitions; their "representational content" is specified in terms of their being a rule.)
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Kant Dictionary INDEX:
List of Terms: Terms beginning with "A", Page 1 |
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Page Number:
1 A: Page 1 of 1.
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