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Metaphysics
Kant on Time
Letizia Nonnis unfolds Kant’s conception of the nature of and experience of time.
One of the most influential accounts of time in the West is the one produced by Immanuel Kant (1724-1804). It is my intention here to explore Kant’s concept of time, especially the way it is bound up with language. This does not mean that I will reduce the problem of time to a mere matter of language, but I do want to demonstrate that language plays a crucial role in respect to time. To do this I will look at Kant’s 1781 blockbuster The Critique of Pure Reason and in particular at the section entitled ‘The Transcendental Aesthetic’. Although Kant doesn’t spend many words on time, reducing the argument to a footnote at the end of the chapter, the argument is very close to the one he employs with regard to space.
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