Published August 2022 | Version v1
Dissertation Open

Kant on Time and Human Cognition

  • 1. University of Chicago

Contributors

Advisor:

Committee members:

Description

Kant's views on time and its role in human cognition are one of the most perplexing, yet suggestive, aspects of his philosophy. I argue that the particulars of Kant's account can only be properly understood by first recognizing the fundamental connection – unappreciated until now – that he sees between time and human cognition. In particular, because human cognition does not create the world that it knows, it presupposes sensible affection by a pre-existing object, and as such necessarily involves a transition between opposing sensory states, which can only occur, I argue, over a structure with time's properties (namely a dense, ordered, relational structure). Using this insight, I generate a unified set of answers to three long-standing puzzles regarding Kant's account of time's role in human cognition, and show that far from being a haphazard collection of idiosyncratic doctrines, Kant's account is the systematic unfolding of a single core thought regarding the connection between time and any mode of cognition that does not create its object.

Files

Brewer_uchicago_0330D_16482.pdf

Files (891.4 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:0015fce50fbbfde4e633ed2f33490b3f
891.4 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:4798

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Arts & Humanities Division
Department(s)
Philosophy