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Kant and the Mind Book

Kant and the Mind
Kant and the Mind, Kant made a number of highly original discoveries about the mind—about its ability to synthesize a single, coherent representation of self and world, about the unity it must have to do so, and about the mind's awareness of itself and the semantic apparatu, Kant and the Mind has a rating of 3.5 stars
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Kant and the Mind, Kant made a number of highly original discoveries about the mind—about its ability to synthesize a single, coherent representation of self and world, about the unity it must have to do so, and about the mind's awareness of itself and the semantic apparatu, Kant and the Mind
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  • Kant and the Mind
  • Written by author Andrew Brook
  • Published by Cambridge University Press, April 1997
  • Kant made a number of highly original discoveries about the mind—about its ability to synthesize a single, coherent representation of self and world, about the unity it must have to do so, and about the mind's awareness of itself and the semantic apparatu
  • A comprehensive overview of Kant's discoveries about the mind for non-specialists.
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Prefacexi
1The contemporary relevance of Kant's work1
1Kant's contribution1
2Kant, functionalism, and cognitive science12
3The resistance of materialists14
2Kant's theory of the subject24
1The need for a subject24
2'One single experience': the unity of experience31
3Kant's doctrine of synthesis34
4The unity of consciousness37
5The kind of unity we have40
6Tying it all together: the mind as a representation43
3Kant's conception of awareness and self-awareness46
1Defining 'Bewusstsein': outer and inner sense47
2Two forms of self-awareness55
3'Bewusstsein': awareness without self-awareness?58
4What is special about apperceptive self-awareness?63
4Kant's theory of apperceptive self-awareness70
1Transcendental designation: the referential base of self-awareness71
2The sources of self-awareness77
3The global representation: theory of the representational base80
4Why apperceptive self-awareness is the way it is85
5Coda: transcendental and empirical aspects of the self90
5The mind in the Critique of Pure Reason95
1Kant's critical project and how the mind fits into it96
2The location of the subjective deduction in the first edition108
3The attack on the Paralogisms in the first edition: synthesis and self-awareness110
4The mind and its awareness of itself in the second edition113
5The Fourth Paralogism and the Refutation of Idealism117
6Interpretive perplexities118
6The first-edition subjective deduction: the object of 'one experience'119
ISynthesis and Unity120
1What is a subjective deduction, and why did Kant offer one?120
2Kitcher and Kant's doctrine of synthesis122
3Apprehension, reproduction, and recognition in concepts124
4Apperception and the unity of individual objects130
5Transcendental apperception: the unity of 'all appearances'132
6Synchronic unity141
IIThe Strange Case of Self-Awareness and the Deduction144
1Apperception and self-awareness144
2Why did Kant introduce self-awareness into the deduction?147
7Kant's diagnosis of the Second Paralogism152
1The Paralogisms154
2Three claims from the subjective deduction156
3The introductory remarks: the strategies of rational psychology160
4The arguments for the Second Paralogism165
5The fourth part of Kant's discussion177
8The Third Paralogism: unity without identity over time179
1Situating the Third Paralogism180
2The structure of Kant's discussion183
3Does unity or memory require identity?185
4Kant and Hume versus Butler and Reid, and Strawson, too191
5To what extent is the unity of consciousness diachronic?195
6Unity as the form of thought: 'time is...in me'197
7Identifying the subject with an object201
8Results and attitude205
9The second-edition subjective deduction: self-representing representations208
1Homunculi and self-representing representations208
2The second-edition Transcendental Deduction212
3[section]15: synthesis in the second edition214
4[section]16 and [section]17: the new version of the central argument216
5The mind as representation223
6Self-representation and self-awareness230
7Mind as representation: final considerations233
10Nature and awareness of the self235
1What the subject is and what we can know about it235
2Is a subject merely a formal requirement?237
3[section]18: empirical versus transcendental apperception; foundationalism242
4[section]24 and [section]25: self-awareness and the noumenal mind246
5Why immediate awareness of the noumenal mind is not knowledge252
6Why did Kant claim that we are immediately aware of the noumenal mind?254
7Coda: the mind in the two versions of the deduction256
8Concluding remarks258
Notes260
Bibliography291
Index of passages cited297
General index300


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