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Table of Contents
Preface and Acknowledgement
Chapter 1. Spatial Time: The Unity of Two Kantian Forms of Intuition
Chapter 2. Teleological Time: A Variation on a Kantian Theme
Chapter 3. The Relationship Between the Formal and Transcendental-Metaphysical Logic
Chapter 4. Restless and Impelling Reason and The Impossibility of Philosophical Satisfaction
Chapter 5. The Problem of Immediate Evidence According to Kant and Hegel
Chapter 6. A Kantian Response to Sellars' Criticism of the Myth of the Given
Chapter 7. The Submission of our Sensuous Nature to the Moral Law in the Second Critique
Chapter 8. Phenomenal Reality and Relationality as a Conditioned Part of the Thing-in-Itself
Chapter 9. Kant's Philosophy Under Panenmentalist Observations
Index.
Chapter 1. Spatial Time: The Unity of Two Kantian Forms of Intuition
Chapter 2. Teleological Time: A Variation on a Kantian Theme
Chapter 3. The Relationship Between the Formal and Transcendental-Metaphysical Logic
Chapter 4. Restless and Impelling Reason and The Impossibility of Philosophical Satisfaction
Chapter 5. The Problem of Immediate Evidence According to Kant and Hegel
Chapter 6. A Kantian Response to Sellars' Criticism of the Myth of the Given
Chapter 7. The Submission of our Sensuous Nature to the Moral Law in the Second Critique
Chapter 8. Phenomenal Reality and Relationality as a Conditioned Part of the Thing-in-Itself
Chapter 9. Kant's Philosophy Under Panenmentalist Observations
Index.