Central Problem

The Critique of Pure Reason addresses the fundamental question: what are the conditions, possibilities, and limits of human knowledge? Kant’s investigation emerges from the debate between rationalism and empiricism concerning the foundations of science. Against rationalism (represented by Leibniz and Wolff), which claimed to derive all knowledge from innate ideas and pure reason, Kant argues that knowledge requires sensory experience. Against empiricism (represented by Locke and especially Hume), which grounded all knowledge in experience alone, Kant contends that experience presupposes certain a priori principles that cannot themselves be derived from experience.

The central problem crystallizes in the question: “How are synthetic a priori judgments possible?” This question encompasses three subordinate inquiries: How is pure mathematics possible? How is pure natural science possible? Is metaphysics as a science possible? Hume had awakened Kant from his “dogmatic slumber” by demonstrating that the principle of causality cannot be derived from experience. If Hume is right, the very foundation of science—its universal and necessary laws—would collapse into mere psychological habit. Kant’s task is to rescue science from skepticism while acknowledging the legitimate boundaries of human reason.

Main Thesis

Kant’s revolutionary solution involves what he calls a “Copernican revolution” in philosophy. Just as Copernicus reversed the relationship between observer and celestial bodies, Kant reverses the relationship between subject and object in knowledge: instead of the mind conforming to objects, objects must conform to the a priori structures of the mind. This inversion grounds the possibility of synthetic a priori knowledge.

The Theory of Judgments:

  • Analytic a priori judgments are those where the predicate merely explicates what is already contained in the subject concept (e.g., “Bodies are extended”). They are universal and necessary but sterile—they do not extend knowledge.
  • Synthetic a posteriori judgments are those where the predicate adds something new to the subject based on experience (e.g., “Bodies are heavy”). They are fertile but lack universality and necessity.
  • Synthetic a priori judgments combine fertility with universality and necessity. They are the foundation of science: they say something new about objects while being universally and necessarily valid.

Knowledge as Synthesis of Matter and Form: Knowledge results from the union of two elements:

  • Matter: the chaotic multiplicity of sensory impressions received from experience (a posteriori element)
  • Form: the fixed mental structures through which the mind organizes these impressions (a priori element)

The Structure of Cognitive Faculties:

  1. Sensibility (Transcendental Aesthetic): The passive faculty through which objects are given to us via the pure forms of space and time
  2. Understanding (Transcendental Analytic): The active faculty through which we think objects via the twelve categories
  3. Reason (Transcendental Dialectic): The faculty that seeks to unify all knowledge through the ideas of soul, world, and God

Phenomenon and Thing-in-Itself:

  • The phenomenon is reality as it appears to us through our a priori forms—not an illusion but the only reality we can know
  • The thing-in-itself (noumenon) is reality considered independently of our forms of knowledge—an unknowable x that nonetheless serves as a limiting concept

The Refutation of Traditional Metaphysics: The ideas of reason (soul, world, God) have no legitimate cognitive use since they transcend all possible experience. The attempt to know them produces:

  • Paralogisms: fallacious arguments about the soul
  • Antinomies: contradictory but equally demonstrable theses about the world
  • Failed proofs: the ontological, cosmological, and physico-theological arguments for God’s existence

Historical Context

The Critique of Pure Reason (1781, second edition 1787) emerged at the height of the German Enlightenment (Aufklärung) and represents the culmination of early modern epistemological debates. Kant lived his entire life in Königsberg, where he taught at the university and developed his critical philosophy through sustained engagement with both rationalist and empiricist traditions.

The intellectual context was shaped by several factors: the stunning success of Newtonian physics, which seemed to establish universal mathematical laws of nature; the challenge posed by Hume’s empiricism to the very possibility of necessary knowledge; the competing claims of Leibnizian-Wolffian rationalism, which dominated German universities; and the growing sense that traditional metaphysics had reached an impasse of empty disputes.

Kant’s pre-critical period saw him working within the rationalist framework while increasingly influenced by Newton and eventually Hume. The “great light” of 1769 and the subsequent “silent decade” of intensive work led to the first Critique, which Kant hoped would settle metaphysical disputes once and for all by determining what reason can and cannot know.

Philosophical Lineage

flowchart TD
    Plato --> Rationalism
    Aristotle --> Scholasticism
    Descartes --> Rationalism
    Leibniz --> Rationalism
    Locke --> Empiricism
    Newton --> Kant
    Hume --> Kant
    Rationalism --> Kant
    Empiricism --> Kant
    Scholasticism --> Kant
    Kant --> German-Idealism
    Kant --> Neo-Kantianism
    Kant --> Phenomenology

    class Plato,Aristotle,Descartes,Leibniz,Locke,Newton,Hume,Kant,Rationalism,Empiricism,Scholasticism,German-Idealism,Neo-Kantianism,Phenomenology internal-link;

Key Thinkers

ThinkerDatesMovementMain WorkCore Concept
Kant1724-1804Critical PhilosophyCritique of Pure ReasonSynthetic a priori, transcendental idealism
Hume1711-1776EmpiricismTreatise of Human NatureSkepticism about causality
Leibniz1646-1716RationalismNew EssaysPre-established harmony, innate ideas
Locke1632-1704EmpiricismEssay Concerning Human UnderstandingTabula rasa, ideas from experience
Newton1643-1727Natural PhilosophyPrincipia MathematicaUniversal laws of nature
Descartes1596-1650RationalismMeditationsCogito, clear and distinct ideas
Berkeley1685-1753EmpiricismThree DialoguesEsse est percipi

Key Concepts

ConceptDefinitionRelated to
Synthetic a prioriJudgments that extend knowledge (synthetic) while being universal and necessary (a priori); the foundation of scienceEpistemology, Kant
TranscendentalNot the a priori elements themselves but the philosophical study of how a priori knowledge of objects is possibleCritical Philosophy, Kant
PhenomenonReality as it appears through our a priori forms; the proper object of human knowledgeEpistemology, Transcendental Idealism
Thing-in-itself (Noumenon)Reality considered independently of our cognitive forms; unknowable but necessary as a limiting conceptMetaphysics, Kant
CategoriesThe twelve pure concepts of understanding through which we think objects; the supreme unifying functions of the intellectLogic, Kant
I think (Ich denke)The transcendental unity of apperception; the supreme principle that must accompany all representationsEpistemology, Kant
Space and TimePure forms of sensibility; not properties of things-in-themselves but a priori conditions of perceptionTranscendental Aesthetic, Kant
Transcendental DeductionThe justification of the legitimate use of categories; showing how a priori concepts apply to experienceEpistemology, Kant
SchematismThe doctrine showing how categories apply to intuitions through temporal “schemes”Epistemology, Kant
AntinomiesContradictions in which reason becomes entangled when using the idea of “world”; pairs of opposed theses equally demonstrableDialectic, Kant

Authors Comparison

ThemeKantHumeLeibniz
Source of knowledgeSynthesis of experience and a priori formsExperience aloneInnate ideas developed by reason
Status of causalitySynthetic a priori principle; necessary for experiencePsychological habit based on constant conjunctionRational principle grounded in sufficient reason
MathematicsBased on pure intuitions of space and timeRelations of ideas (analytic)Truths of reason (analytic)
MetaphysicsImpossible as theoretical science; legitimate as critiqueMeaningless speculationSupreme rational science
Space and timeA priori forms of sensibilityIdeas derived from experienceIdeal relations among substances
Thing-in-itselfExists but is unknowableQuestion makes no senseMonads as ultimate reality

Influences & Connections

Summary Formulas

  • Kant: Human knowledge is the synthesis of sensory matter and a priori forms; we can know phenomena but not things-in-themselves; science is grounded in synthetic a priori judgments that express the necessary conditions for any possible experience.
  • Hume: All knowledge derives from experience; causality is merely psychological habit from observing constant conjunctions; necessary connection cannot be demonstrated.
  • Leibniz: The mind contains innate ideas that develop through rational reflection; all truths are ultimately analytic; the principle of sufficient reason governs all existence.

Timeline

YearEvent
1724Kant born in Königsberg
1739-40Hume publishes A Treatise of Human Nature
1755Kant receives doctorate; publishes Universal Natural History
1763Kant publishes The Only Possible Argument for a Demonstration of God’s Existence
1770Kant publishes Inaugural Dissertation; “great light” period
1781Kant publishes Critique of Pure Reason (first edition)
1783Kant publishes Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics
1787Kant publishes Critique of Pure Reason (second edition with Refutation of Idealism)
1804Kant dies in Königsberg

Notable Quotes

“Thoughts without content are empty, intuitions without concepts are blind.” — Kant

“I call transcendental all knowledge that is occupied not so much with objects as with the manner of our knowledge of objects insofar as this manner is to be possible a priori.” — Kant

“It remains a scandal to philosophy and to human reason in general that the existence of things outside us must be accepted merely on faith.” — Kant


NOTE

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