Main | Browse | Search | Author Links | Manage ETD List | Review ETDs | Catalog ETDs | Help
 

Title page for ETD etd-07242009-235431


Type of Document Dissertation
Author Hebbeler, James Christopher
Author's Email Address hebbeler.1@nd.edu
URN etd-07242009-235431
Title Critical Belief in the Unconditioned: Kant's Antinomy as a Positive Response to Skepticism about Reason
Degree Doctor of Philosophy
Department Philosophy
Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title
Dr. Karl P. Ameriks Committee Chair
Dr. Fred L. Rush Committee Member
Dr. G. Felicitas Munzel Committee Member
Dr. Paul W. Franks Committee Member
Keywords
  • organism
  • natural predispositions
  • metaphysics
  • fourth antinomy
  • criticism
  • dogmatism
  • intelligibility
  • critical belief
  • principle
  • material
  • formal
  • efficient
  • final
  • knowledge
  • rational cognition
  • historical cognition
  • synthetic a priori
  • necessity
  • modal ascription
  • sensory intuition
  • apodictic judgment
  • assertoric judgment
  • practical necessity
  • belief in the unconditioned
  • pure empiricism
  • dogmatism of pure reason
Date of Defense 2009-07-15
Availability unrestricted
Abstract
I argue for a reading of the Critique of Pure Reason that addresses several related inadequacies in Kant scholarship. First, I argue that the problem of skepticism with which the Critique is centrally concerned is not the problem of skepticism about the external world or about ordinary knowledge but rather the problem of skepticism about reason. This latter problem of skepticism, I argue, is rooted in the difficulty of providing a philosophical account of the faculty of theoretical reason that preserves its unity while at the same time doing justice to its various intrinsic, but seemingly incompatible aims.

Second, I argue that, in order to understand the Critique as responding to this problem, we need to rethink this work as providing not just a metaphysics of experience but also a metaphysics of reason. I provide an account of the nature of theoretical reason that reveals its teleological structure, including the aims both of the understanding and of reason as the highest intellectual faculty. With this account I argue that Kant’s positive theory of reason extends beyond the Transcendental Analytic and ultimately into the Antinomy of Pure Reason chapter of the Dialectic, where the problem of skepticism about reason and its eventual solution are fully articulated.

Third, I offer a novel reading of Kant’s solution to the Antinomy by showing how Kant’s conception of belief is implicitly at work in it. With this reading I provide a new account of Kant’s justification for the doctrine of transcendental idealism, understood metaphysically. That is, I argue that Kant’s solution to the Antinomy and his completed account of the metaphysics of reason involves the justified assertion that there exists a non-spatial, non-temporal, unconditioned ground of nature—a thing in itself.

My reading of Kant’s account of the unity of theoretical reason has implications for Kant’s account of the unity of reason as a whole. It shows Kant to have established a much tighter relation between theoretical and practical reason—and, with it, a more sophisticated and comprehensive response to the Enlightenment need for a rationally grounded account of faith—than is generally recognized in the literature.

Files
  Filename       Size       Approximate Download Time (Hours:Minutes:Seconds) 
 
 28.8 Modem   56K Modem   ISDN (64 Kb)   ISDN (128 Kb)   Higher-speed Access 
  HebbelerJ072009D.pdf 3.62 Mb 00:16:44 00:08:36 00:07:31 00:03:45 00:00:19

Browse All Available ETDs by ( Author | Department )

If you have more questions or technical problems, please Contact the Graduate School.