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Kant and the Claims of the Empirical World: a Transcendental Reading of the Critique of the Power of Judgment
Kant and the Claims of the Empirical World: a Transcendental Reading of the Critique of the Power of Judgment

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2024.08.12 : View this Review Online | View Recent NDPR Reviews

Ido Geiger, Kant and the Claims of the Empirical World: a Transcendental Reading of the Critique of the Power of Judgment, Cambridge University Press, 2022, 239pp., $32.99 (pbk), ISBN 9781108834261.

Reviewed by Nick Stang, University of Toronto

Readers of Kant’s third Critique, the Critique of the Power of Judgment, are presented with a set of puzzles about the unity, indeed, the very existence, of the very book before them: why did Kant think his critical system was ‘incomplete’ without a critique of the power of judgment, and why would such a critique complete that system? Why must that critique contain a critique of aesthetic judgment and a critique of teleological judgment? Are each equally necessary to the critical project? To borrow a trope from Kant himself, is this book a mere aggregate of its parts, or is it unified by an idea of the whole that determines those parts? And if so, what is that idea, and does it determine that the third…

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