#63216
Mentioned in 1 episodes
Phenomenological Interpretation of Kant's Critique of Pure Reason
Book • 1997
Heidegger’s Phenomenological Interpretation of Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason consists of lectures and essays that re-read Kant through the lens of phenomenology, focusing on temporality and the role of imagination.
Heidegger criticizes the later B-deduction for marginalizing temporality and for inviting logicist readings of Kant.
The work situates Kantian questions within Heidegger’s ontological project and influenced subsequent continental scholarship on Kant.
It underscores the importance of lived temporal structures for understanding transcendental conditions.
The book is part of Heidegger's broader engagement with the history of philosophy.
Heidegger criticizes the later B-deduction for marginalizing temporality and for inviting logicist readings of Kant.
The work situates Kantian questions within Heidegger’s ontological project and influenced subsequent continental scholarship on Kant.
It underscores the importance of lived temporal structures for understanding transcendental conditions.
The book is part of Heidegger's broader engagement with the history of philosophy.
Mentioned by
Mentioned in 1 episodes
Mentioned by ![undefined]()

as Heidegger's lectures interpreting Kant and critiquing the B-deduction's treatment of imagination.

Todd McGowan

16 snips
Transcendental Deduction (Kant's Critique of Pure Reason)


