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General Observations on Transcendental Esthetic
Second Part. Transcendental Logic.
Introduction. The Idea of a Transcendental Logic.
34
40-51
40
I. Of Logic in General .
II. Of Transcendental Logic.
44
III. Of the Division of General Logic into Analytic and
Dialectic
46
IV. Of the Division of Transcendental Logic into Tran-
scendental Analytic and Dialectic .
49
Chapter II. Of the Deduction of the Pure Concepts of
the Understanding.
Section 1. Of the Principles of a Transcendental
Section 2. Of the a priori Grounds for the Possibil-
ity of Experience .
1. Of the Synthesis of Apprehension in Intuition.
2. Of the Synthesis of Reproduction in Imagination
3. Of the Synthesis of Recognition in Concepts
4. Preliminary Explanation of the Possibility of the
Categories as Knowledge a priori .
Section 3. Of the Relation of the Understanding to
Objects in General, and the Possibility of Know-
ing them a priori.
70
79
82
83
85
91
Summary Representation of the Correctness, and of
the Only Possibility of this Deduction of the Pure
Concepts of the Understanding.
Book II. Analytic of Principles
94
105
107-237
Introduction. Of the Transcendental Faculty of Judg-
ment in General
Chapter I. Of the Schematism of the Pure Concepts of
108
112
Chapter II. System of all Principles of the Pure Under-
(Book II. Chapter II.)
Section 3. Systematical Representation of all Syn-
thetical Principles of the Pure Understanding
1. Axioms of Intuition
2. Anticipations of Perception.
3. Analogies of Experience
First Analogy. Principle of Permanence
Second Analogy. Principle of Production
Third Analogy. Principle of Community
4. The Postulates of Empirical Thought in General
PAGE
129
133
136
144
149
155
172
178
Chapter III. On the Ground of Distinction of all Sub-
jects into Phenomena and Noumena
Appendix. Of the Amphiboly of Reflective Concepts,
owing to the Confusion of the Empirical with the
Transcendental Use of the Understanding
Second Division. Transcendental Dialectic.
Introduction
1. Of Transcendental Appearance (Illusion).
192-
212
2. Of Pure Reason as the seat of Transcendental Illu-
Book II. Of the Dialectical Conclusions of Pure Reason 275-564
Chapter I. Of the Paralogisms of Pure Reason
First Paralogism. Of Substantiality.
Second Paralogism. Of Simplicity
Third Paralogism. Of Personality
Fourth Paralogism. Of Ideality.
(Book II. Chapter 1.)
Consideration on the Whole of Pure Psychology, as
affected by these Paralogisms
Chapter II. The Antinomy of Pure Reason .
308
328
Section 3. Of the Interest of Reason in these Con-
flicts
Section 4. Of the Transcendental Problems of Pure
Reason, and the Absolute Necessity of their
Solution
379
389
Section 5. Sceptical Representation of the Cosmolog-
ical Questions in the Four Transcendental Ideas . 396
Section 6. Transcendental Idealism as the Key to the
Solution of Cosmological Dialectic
400
Section 7. Critical Decision of the Cosmological
Conflict of Reason with itself
405
Section 8. The Regulative Principle of Pure Reason
with Regard to the Cosmological Ideas
413
Section 9. Of the Empirical Use of the Regulative
Principle of Reason with Regard to all Cosmolog-
ical Ideas
419
1. Solution of the Cosmological Idea of the Total-
ity of the Composition of Phenomena in an
Universe
420
II. Solution of the Cosmological Idea of the Total-
ity of the Division of a Whole given in Intu-
ition
425
(Book II. Chapter II. Section 9.)
Concluding Remarks on the Solution of the
Transcendental-mathematical Ideas, and Pre-
liminary Remark for the Solution of the
Transcendental-dynamical Ideas .
III. Solution of the Cosmological Ideas with Regard
to the Totality of the Derivation of Cosmical
Events from their Causes
428
432
Possibility of a Causality through Freedom, in Har-
mony with the Universal Law of Necessity. 436
Explanation of the Cosmological Idea of Freedom
in Connection with the General Necessity of
Nature.
IV. Solution of the Cosmological Idea of the Total-
ity of the Dependence of Phenomena, with
Regard to their Existence in General
439
Section 3. Of the Arguments of Speculative Reason
in Proof of the Existence of a Supreme Being
Section 4. Of the Impossibility of an Ontological
452
471
Proof of the Existence of God
477
Section 5. Of the Impossibility of a Cosmological
Discovery and Explanation of the Dialectical Illusion
in all Transcendental Proofs of the Existence of
a Necessary Being
.
486
495
Section 6. Of the Impossibility of the Physico-theo-
logical Proof
499
Section 7. Criticism of all Theology based on Spec-
ulative Principles of Reason.
508