Critique have crucial implications for post- Kantian debates about the space of the knowable, the space of the unknowable and the boundary between them. Of course, on Kant's account, one of the boundaries between the knowable and the unknowable is precisely space as a condition of possibility of cognition belonging to sensibility. The chapter addresses questions about space considered both as an a priori form of sensible intuition and as a metaphor for what, in Kant, is non- sensible, but thinkable, in particular, the ideas of freedom, immortality and God. Thinking these ideas of reason, as regulative ideals, involves acts of the imagination and provides an alternative to the two- worlds reading of Kant." /> Metaphors of spatial location - Anderson Pamela Sue | sdvig press

Metaphors of spatial location

understanding post-kantian space

Pamela Sue Anderson

pp. 169-196


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