Kant and the Problem of Self-Knowledge

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A01=Luca Forgione
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Author_Luca Forgione
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Basic Self-consciousness
Cartesian self
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concepts
conceptualism
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de re
de se
de se attitudes
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description
descriptivism
designation
direct reference
Direct Reference Theory
Empirical Apperception
Empirical Self-knowledge
epistemic subjectivity
Epistemic Thesis
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eq_nobargain
exclusion
faculties
formal identity theory
I think
Immanuel Kant
Indeterminate Thought
Indexical Representation
inner sense
intuition
Kant
kant's theory of mind
knowledge
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Luca Forgione
metaphysics of mind
Natural Kind Terms
no-ownership
Non-conceptual Content
non-conceptualism
Outer Sense
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paralogisms
philosophy of self-consciousness
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principle of the unity of apperception
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Pure Apperception
qua representation
Qua Thinking
representations
self-consciousness
self-identification
self-knowledge
semantic reference
Semantic Thesis
Singular Judgments
singularism
softlaunch
Spatio Temporal
Synthetic Unity
Thinking Subject
Transcendental Apperception
Transcendental Deduction
Transcendental Designation
transcendental dialectic
Transcendental Object
transcendental philosophy
Transcendental Subject
Unarticulated Constituent
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367664923
  • Weight: 420g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Sep 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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This book addresses the problem of self-knowledge in Kant’s philosophy. As Kant writes in his major works of the critical period, it is due to the simple and empty representation ‘I think’ that the subject’s capacity for self-consciousness enables the subject to represent its own mental dimension. This book articulates Kant’s theory of self-knowledge on the basis of the following three philosophical problems: 1) a semantic problem regarding the type of reference of the representation ‘I’; 2) an epistemic problem regarding the type of knowledge relative to the thinking subject produced by the representation ‘I think’; and 3) a strictly metaphysical problem regarding the features assigned to the thinking subject’s nature. The author connects the relevant scholarly literature on Kant with contemporary debates on the huge philosophical field of self-knowledge. He develops a formal reading according to which the unity of self-consciousness does not presuppose the identity of a real subject, but a formal identity based on the representation ‘I think’.

Luca Forgione is Associate Professor in Philosophy of Language and in Philosophy of Mind at the University of Basilicata, Italy.

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