Lectures On Critique of Pure Reason
Lectures On Critique of Pure Reason
Lectures On Critique of Pure Reason
These notes (which I have divided into lectures for ease of reference) are intended to
offer a reading of the Critique of Pure Reason, which dwells upon the main themes of
Kants metaphysical and epistemological thought. The content of each lecture is
largely provisional and far from complete due to the fact that Kants text presents very
condensed arguments nearly in every single page. Nevertheless, I hope these lectures
will be of use for students who approach Kants thought for the first time. There are
some gaps here and there that need to be filled. Ill add Lecture 10 as soon as
possible.
My preferred translation of Kants Critique is Guyer-Wood edited by Cambridge. I
strongly recommend it. However, since I refer to the text using the standard
numeration of original Critique editions (1781 and 1787, A and B respectively, followed
by page number), it is possible to opt for other translations such as those of Pluhar
(edited by Hackett) or Kemp Smith (edited by Cambridge). I do not recommend any
other translation.
Introductory works
Burnham D., Young H., Kants Critique of Pure Reason. An Edinburg Philosophical
Guide, (Edinburg, 2007)
Buroker J.V., Kants Critique of Pure Reason. An introduction, (Oxford, 2006)
Gardner S., Kant and the Critique of Pure Reason, (London, 1999)
Advanced works (for who is interested in looking at certain topics in more depth)
Allison H., Kants Transcendental Idealism. An Interpretation and Defense (Yale, 2004)
Bird G., The Revolutionary Kant. A Commentary on the Critique of Pure Reason,
(Chicago, 2006)
Guyer P. (ed), The Cambridge Companion to Kants Critique of Pure Reason,
(Cambridge, 2010)
Schedule
Lecture 1, Preface A/B and Introduction B. Reading: A vii-xxii; B vii-xliv; B 1-30.
Lecture 2, Aesthetic. Reading: B 33-73.
Lecture 3, Analytic of Concepts I. Metaphysical Deduction of the Categories. Reading:
B 74-116.
Lecture 4, Analytic of Concepts II. Transcendental Deduction B. Reading: B 116-168.
Lecture 5, Analytic of Principles I: Schematism (ch.1); Axioms and Anticipations
(ch.2a). Reading: B 169-218;
Lecture 6, Analytic of Principles II: Analogies and Postulates (ch.2b). Reading: B 218273;
Lecture 7, Analytic of Principles III: Phenomena & Noumena (ch.3). Reading: B 274315;
Lecture 8, Dialectic I: Introduction (book 1), Paralogisms (book 2, chapter 1). Reading:
B 396-432;
Lecture 9, Dialectic II: Antinomies (book 2, chapter 2). Reading: B 432-488;
Lecture 10, Dialectic III: the Ideal of Pure Reason (book 2, chapter 3). Reading:
following the same secure course of other sciences? Of course not (remember
metaphysics is a battlefield, the typical metaphysical movement is groping).
- Baconian inspiration 1. Remember that Kant takes his motto from Bacon, a partisan
of the cause of modern science. What Bacons Instauratio Magna merely anticipated (a
general renewal of thought), Kant actually accomplishes with regard to metaphysics.
- Baconian inspiration 2. Lets try an experiment: Copernican Revolution (this
experiment succeeds B xviii). This experiment has consequences, some are
positive, others negative.
Positive: it allows us to justify a priori knowledge (and hence science) within
reason;
Negative: it restrict the use of theoretical reason within the boundaries of
(sensible) possible experience (end of B xix)
Look at some other effects of the experiment:
The problem of the unconditioned takes now a rather different shape: the
metaphysical contradictions traditionally attached to it disappear but we must
admit the notion of things in themselves (B xx e xxvi).
Traditional metaphysical problems, such as the existence of God, freedom and
the soul, cant be resolved on the ground of theoretical reason (which is limited
to possible experience), but solely in the practical domain (primacy of the
practical, in opposition to the risks of dogmatism, see B xxv e xxviii-xxix, xxx
etc.).
- return to the question of Preface A: what is critique? A positive effect of Copernican
Revolution is related to the definition of Kants enterprise. Critique is the selfknowledge of reason, a treatise on the method (B xxii), a catalog (B xxiii), the
critique of reason must remain within reason (see further comments section below).
Introduction B
The basic question of the Introduction are two: what are experience? What are
synthetic a priori judgments?
- Kants metaphysics or critique is a theory of experience: to work up the raw
materials (B1, see also the definition of experience in A1). To anticipate, experience
will turn out to be a structured process involving both sensibility and understanding,
each of which has different roles.
- Kant employs some conceptual distinctions all referred to cognition and its ground,
i.e. judgment: pure/empirical, a priori/a posteriori, analytic/synthetic (plus some new
metaphysical distinctions appearances/things in themselves, transcendental/real).
- a priori / a posteriori is a distinction concerned with the source of our knowledge,
independent or dependent upon experience. It derives from medieval commentaries
on Aristotles Posterior Analytic (see Ockham, Summa Logicae III; 2, 17).
- analytic / synthetic judgments: is concerned with the legitimation and potential
expansion of knowledge.
Judgment in the logical sense is an assertion or proposition that connects a two
representations, the subject S and the predicate P through the copula, is/are, in
a unity, S is P. so, for example, body and heavy are combined in All
bodies are heavy.
In the case of analytic judgments, the ground of the connection lies in the
subject in which the predicate is already, sometime covertly, contained (B 10).
So for example we can derive by analysis from the concept of body those of
extension, impenetrability, figure, and so on. (B 12). Notice that the truth
of such assertions is decided by the semantic rule of language not by
experience. Think for example another case: a triangle is a figure with three
angle is a true judgment or proposition, but its true does not require an
inspection of experience.
Synthetic judgments are ampliative in the sense that they go beyond the
knowledge already contained in the subject. Judgments of experience, as such,
are all synthetic (B 11)
A priori
analytic (necessity, universality)
truths RATIONALISM
A posteriori synthetic (contingency)
judgments EMPIRICISM
amplification
empirical
If this scheme were exhaustive, science would be impossible. But we know that at
least logic, math and physics are actually sciences, they are actually given (B 20),
while metaphysics is not (see the general problem B 19). So, a new kind of judgment
must be possible: synthetic a priori judgment.
A priori
A posteriori
certainty)
A priori
certainty) = SCIENCE
clarification
How are synthetic a priori judgments possible? Is the core question of the entire
Critique. If they are possible, then, are they also valid in the metaphysical domain?
Famous examples of synthetic a priori judgments by Kant: Everything that happens
has its cause (B 13) and 7+5=12 (B 15), in all alterations of the corporeal world
the quantity of matter remains unaltered and in all communication of motion effect
and counter-effect must always be equal. (B 17).
- transcendental: is one of the most terms of the entire Kants Critique, one that can
be easily misconceived. Transcendental (a term coming from medieval tradition,
Wolff and Baumgarten) has nothing to do with a world beyond the senses. We can
distinguish at least two main senses of the word:
1) the first is connected with the concept of the synthetic a priori: I call all
cognition transcendental that is occupied not so much with objects but rather
with our mode of cognition of objects insofar as this is to be possible a priori (B
25).
2) according to the second, the critique of knowledge has two parts (that we will
encounter both in Aesthetic, Analytic and Dialectic), a metaphysical part and a
transcendental part more properly.
the accused, 2) the prosecution 3) the defense 4) the judge 5) and who enacts
the law, at the same time.
- the judicial critique of the higher human faculty breaks down in two main part:
I) it secures the justified claims of reason in view of a legitimation of scientific
knowledge (Aesthetic, Analytic); II) it repudiates the groundless assumptions of
reason by unmasking the errors of traditional metaphysics (Dialectic). (For a
more comprehensive general partition of the Critique see the chart attached).
Aesthetic
Analytic (logic of truth)
Doctrine of Method
- What is then philosophy according to Kant? We can point out four levels of
philosophical enquiry:
1) is concerned with the basic pure a priori elements of experience (theory of
human experience): SPACE, TIME, CATEGORIES of understanding (remember the
definition of critique as inventory or catalog)
2) new transcendental theory of science which exhibits the a priori conditions of
possibility of science itself (the aforementioned elements)
3) confronts with the typical metaphysical objects (soul, God, freedom) in a
critical way, and supplements the theory of experience with the regulative
employment of IDEAS.
4) reflects upon the limits of philosophical work stated in points 1, 2 and 3
(meta-philosophy).
The Aesthetic is dedicated to SPACE and TIME. The crucial question here is: granted
that space and time cannot be intuited directly (B 37), what are they?
- the exposition follows the distinction between metaphysical exposition and
transcendental exposition (see the previous lecture for some comments on this
distinction). The former is intended to show that which exhibits the concept as given
a priori (B 38), while the latter contains the explanation of a concept as a principle
from which insight into the possibility of other synthetic a priori cognitions can be
gained. (B 40).
- the two metaphysical expositions of space and time state that SPACE and TIME:
1) are not empirical concepts drawn from experience, but are a priori
presuppositions of experience;
They cannot be derived from abstraction from experience because they
already underlie all outer or inner sensations (B 38, cf. B 46).
If I perceive a chair, for example, as external to me besides the table, I
employ the concepts of chair myself and table together with the
representation of something outside me (SPACE) within which me, the
chair and the table can entertain relations: In space their form,
magnitude, and relation to one another is determined (B 37). Outside
me means being in a different place from myself. The same for TIME in
reference with the concept of succession.
2) are necessary a priori representations that ground a) outer intuitions (space
is the outer sense), b) all intuitions, respectively (time is the inner sense that is
presupposed by all intuitions; see for the primacy of time B 50);
One can never represent that there is no space, although one can very
well think that there are no objects to be encountered in it (B 38f). In
regard to appearances in general one cannot remove time, though one
can very well take the appearances away from time (B 46).
If we think away every objects that is actually present from space and
time, we remain with a medium, a pure form of intuition, an antecedent
unity.
3) are not discursive, or general concept of relations of things, but pure
intuitions;
SPACE and TIME furnish certain unity to multiplicity, but not a conceptual
one. The unity of SPACE and TIME is not a universal in relation to a
particular, but a whole in relation to its part. For example, a segment is
not a particular case of the universal concept segment, but is a part of
the SPACE as a whole.
4) are both represented as infinite magnitudes, but are both unique (there are
not many spaces or many dimensions of time), hence are intuitive in character.
They do not contain an infinite number of representations under them, but an
infinite number of objects within them.
- the two transcendental expositions state that:
1) SPACE, as a priori form of outer intuition (contiguity), grounds the possibility
of Geometry;
- the Aesthetic is the first decisive step in the path of the Copernican Revolution; it
is intended to prove the viability of the experiment presented before as a hypothesis
(B xix).
THINGS IN THEMSELVES
- Logic occupies the central, and most ample, part of the Critique. Logic is for Kant a
sort of theory of thought, not a general theory of formal inferences as is conceived
today. Kant understands logic as the analysis of the understanding and its content,
which has to reveal the criterion for determining the possibility of all knowledge and
its respective limits.
It is worth remarking that Kants logic is not an ORGANON of sciences, that is, the logic
as Kant conceives of it, cannot be an art of scientific discovery, but only a CANON for
the correct use of the understanding.
- the articulation of logic follows the German tradition of Aristotelian thought (e.g. J.H.
Lambert, in his Organon [1764] and Architektonik [1771] already stated all of the
types of judgments distinguished by Kant in his table of judgments): the
understanding, the power of judgment, reason and their corresponding logical objects:
concepts, judgments and inferences (B 169).
Analytic: doctrine of pure concepts of the understanding and synthetic a priori
judgments
Dialectic: doctrine of ideas and rational inferences
- Logic as the pure analysis of the understanding and its content, pure concepts,
mediates between rationalism and empiricism. While rationalism considered
concepts as innate and already completed collection of powers, and empiricism as
simply acquired, Kant treats concepts as dispositions or potentials.
- Kants articulation of logic is divided in two main parts: GENERAL logic and
PARTICULAR logic (B 76-79):
GENERAL logic = contains absolutely necessary rules of thinking, it abstract
from all content of cognition, it has to do with the mere form of thinking
PARTICULAR = rules for thinking about a certain kind of objects
GENERAL logic divides in PURE and APPLIED:
PURE = it abstract from all empirical condition under which our understanding
is exercised (from the influences of the senses, from the play of imagination,
the laws of memory, etc.)
APPLIED = it is directed to the rules of the use of the understanding under the
subjective empirical conditions that psychology teaches us; it deals with
attention, its hindrance and consequences, the cause of error, the condition of
doubt, of reservation, of conviction, etc.; and general and pure logic is related
to it as pure morality [] is related to the doctrine of virtue proper...
Then Kant introduces a third type of logic, TRANSCENDENTAL = is a material logic, is
concerned with content, but only with the a priori condition of it. It would therefore
concern the origin of our cognition of objects insofar as that cannot be ascribed to the
objects;, a science of pure understanding and of the pure cognition of reason, by
means of which we think objects completely a priori. Such a science, which would
determine the origin, the domain, and the objective validity of such cognitions... (B
81)
UNDERSTANDING
Spontaneity: the faculty for bringing
forth representations.
The transcendental Deduction of the categories is one of the most difficult pieces of
the entire philosophy, and it cost to Kant the greatest effort. I shall begin providing an
overall scheme of the central argumentation. After discussing the main achievements
of it, well focus on other more particular themes. In the second edition of the Critique,
Kant introduced numbered paragraphs, for simplicity Ill refer to them in my
reconstruction.
Brief overview of the argument
1. INTRODUCTION. Sections (13) e (14) specifies the aim of the argument, one
which corresponds to Kants general epistemic revolution in seeking the origin
of the categories in the subject rather than in the object of experience.
2. MAIN BODY I (15-21). First part of the central argument is divided in three
subsidiary steps:
a. Kant begins by explicating transcendental self-consciousness as the
origin of all objective unification of experience: (15) the activity of
connection that is required for all knowledge can only be performed by
the subject itself, (16) and this corresponds to transcendental selfconsciousness (I-think), (17) which in turn forms the highest principle of
all employment of the understanding.
b. These sections qualify transcendental self-consciousness as objective
unity (18), and present the categories, without explicitly mentioning the
term, as the necessary conditions of such unity (19).
c. After an initial summary of the argument (20), Kant goes on to show
how all sensuous intuitions can only be made into objective cognition
through the transcendental self-consciousness and the categories (21).
Kant has hitherto proved that pure concepts of the understanding are
necessary for experience. It has not yet been demonstrated that these
concepts apply to experience as a whole and to nothing but the field of
experience.
3. MAIN BODY II (22-26). Part two of the central argument explicitly takes up this
remaining task and therefore represents an independent proof step in its own
right There are four problem cases or objections considered by Kant, whose
discussion restricts the application of the categories to the objects of possible
experience, and explains how the categories are valid, within possible
experience, for all objects, and particularly for mathematics:
a. The first case is that of mathematics (22);
b. The second concerns the possibility of non-sensuous intuition and is thus
simply eliminated (23);
c. The third, concerning transcendental self-consciousness, reveals that the
latter does not represent any kind of self-knowledge (24-25);
d. The fourth problem, concerning the connection process of perception in
which experience consists, can only be fully through careful interpretation
(26);
it must be originally be unique and equally valid for all combinations (B 130)
and consists in the ground of the unity of different concepts in judgments (B
131).
Even analysis presupposes an activity of combination since where the
understanding has not previously combined anything, neither can it dissolve
anything (B 130).
Synthesis enjoys epistemological pre-eminence over the kinds of possible
analysis and combinations of the manifold (both of the intuitions and of the
concepts). It occupies a logical higher level (B 131), must be a priori and
independent from the category of unity itself. It is the ultimate ground of unity.
16. What I-think does not mean: empirical consciousness of this or that feeling,
mind state, or subjective ascription of mind state. Kant is here concerned with the preempirical condition of the unity of experience (even of inner or psychological
experience).
I-think is a synthetic unity of self-consciousness insofar as it accomplishes
combination
Is an originally unity of SC insofar as it essentially precedes all combination
Is a non-empirical unity of SC insofar as it is presupposed in all empirical
cognition, including empirical cognition of self-consciousness.
17. Synthetic unity of apperception (or transcendental self-consciousness or Ithink, have all the same meaning) is the highest point to which one must affix all
use of the understanding, even the whole of logic and, after it, transcendental
philosophy (B 134 footnote).
Threefold definition of understanding as (i) faculty complementary to sensibility,
(ii) faculty of judging and (iii) faculty of all cognition (B 137).
1) the manifold of sensations is brought into the unity of a concept (body, or
weight, etc.)
2) concepts are combined by means of the categories into the unity of an
objective judgment: the body is heavy.
3) the knowledge of the object, with its potential reference to the self, comes to
the unity of transcendental self-consciousness
18-19
18. It contrasts objective unity with the subjective, empirical and contingent unity of
consciousness which determines inner sense in accordance with the laws of
association, and which is accomplished by the reproductive imagination.
19. In the case of objective unity the judging subject is present in the background as
the accompanying I-think. It defines the judgment as nothing other than the way to
bring given cognitions to the objective unity of the apperception (B 141). This means
that objectivity is due to the connection of the categories. In addition to
transcendental-SC, categories are the conditions of all objectivity.
20-21,
These sections draw the relevant conclusion: Thus the manifold in a given intuition
also necessary stands under categories (B 143).
22-26
The second part of the main argument supports the above conclusion in two respect,
by showing (i) that the categories can be employed for the construction of objective
reality as a whole, and (ii) that they can indeed only be employed for this purpose.
This interpretation is consistent with Kants emphasis on the theme of the two sources
of knowledge and his war on empiricism and rationalism (as we had seen above).
In order to contrast rationalism, Kant faces 4 problem cases or objections.
I.
II. (23) as far as a possible non-sensible object of experience, like the soul, Kant
submits that we can provide only negative statement which do not represent
genuine knowledge (B 149).
III. (24-25) against Descartes, who believes that self-consciousness implies selfknowledge, Kant maintains that transcendental apperception, or transcendental
self-consciousness, contains only conscience of the fact that I am, but never
the knowledge of what I am. I-think is a form that deploys concepts, whereas
the real self is an object of empirical introspection, knowable through the
internal experience made possible by intuitions and categories (but this
experience can have access only to selfs affections not to the self in itself). The
subject never appears as things in itself, it has a purely phenomenal character
(B 152sgg).
IV. (26) with reference to perception, categories are capable of prescribing laws to
nature (B 159), and are the conditions of the possibility of the cognition of
sensible objects (e.g. house and freezing water, B 162). It arises the problem if
cognition does pre-form all perceptions, or if there could be a non-conceptual
kind of perception (B 161). In B 164-165 Kant submits that categories are
conditions of all possible perceptions.
(B 164-165). The transcendental I-think is at once the unity of selfconsciousness and the unity of nature, subjectivity and objectivity in one.
(27) the conclusion of the argument consists in two statements referring to the
twofold parts of the argument itself: We cannot think any object except through
categories; we cannot cognize any object that is thought except through intuitions that
corresponds to those concepts. (B 165). Kant underlines the Copernican meaning of
that conclusion (B 166).
Schematism
- Whats the meaning of this section? After the deduction, Kant introduces a third
faulty of cognition, the power of judgment, which purports to mediate between
sensibility and understanding by means of transcendental schemata.
This is a crucial point with reference both to the prosecution of the Critiques argument
(in particular the second chapter of the Analytic of Principle develops the judgments
which the understanding makes a priori under the presuppositions of the
transcendental schemata) and to its general theoretical achievement (in particular
with reference to the third chapter of the Analytic of Principle, titled Phenomena and
Noumena B 186).
One may wonder what the aim of this part really is. Many scholars have found this
chapter rather obscure, confused and superfluous. This is not the case. The reason
why this part is necessary is that Kant does not finish the deduction, he does not
entirely accomplish the transcendental task of demonstrating the objectivity of the
pure elements of cognition in regard to the understanding. The previous deduction has
certainly shown that what we have called categoriality is indispensable. But it has
not yet demonstrated this specifically either for the individual categories or for natural
science (pure natural science B 20). Remember that until now, Kant has
demonstrated that mathematics includes a synthetic a priori dimension, but there is
also another science (physics) which has not even been discussed yet.
Kant has stated how categories relates to the synthesis of the I-think, but how the
categories can be applied to the domain of sensibility is a rather different concern.
This question explicitly recognize the heterogeneity of sensibility and understanding.
And this is precisely why the schemata are required: filling the gap between the two.
The schema is a third thing, which must stand in homogeneity with the category on
the one hand and the appearances on the other, and makes possible the application of
the former to the latter B 177).
- the argument can be broken down in three parts:
a) isolating the pure power of judgment
b) seeking in the chapter on the schematism to identify its a priori elements
c) developing the principles which follow a priori from the pure concepts of the
understanding (the task that Kant will take up in the second chapter of the
Analytic of Principles).
- what is the new faculty? The power of judgment is the faculty of subsuming under
rules (B 171).
In this respect is distinct from understanding: knowing that the rules are such an
such, does not coincide with the know how that is required to apply them
properly. Hence the importance of the examples (B 173).
It is subsidiary to the understanding, and not to sensibility as well.
It requires schemata, a representation that exhibits both an intuitive and
conceptual character.
- There are schemata for empirical concepts, sensible concepts (e.g. a triangle), and
pure concepts. The latter are significantly the most difficult to handle and are called
transcendental schemata. Transcendental schemata are to be kept distinct from
images or concepts (B 179): see example of the five points .. (B 179): On the
contrary, if I only think a number in general, which could be five or a hundred, this
thinking is more the representation of a method for representing a multitude (e.g. a
thousand) in an image in accordance with a certain concept than the image itself.. (B
179). The schema is thus a representation of a general procedure of the imagination
for providing a concept with its image (B 180). So, the schema is a method which
allow us to elaborate upon the individual case and to decide which empirical concept
we should employ with respect to which sensible intuition. The schema is a method for
judging. See Kants examples: the triangle, and the dog (B 180).
- The justification of the temporal aspect of transcendental schemata goes like this:
They mediate in relation to the pure understanding
The categories relate to sensibility through schematization: Without schemata,
therefore, the categories are only functions of the understanding for concepts,
but do not represent any object (B 187).
To be pure, they must refer to pure intuition.
The pure unity required by the category can be provided by inner sense (B 181):
is a transcendental product of the imagination, which concerns the
determination of the inner sense in general (B 181)
Transcendental schemata are determinations of time in accordance with a priori
rules.
As determination of time they accord with intuition, as governed by a priori rules, they
accord with concepts. This doubled accordance furnishes the criteria for applying
categories to sensible impressions. The function of a schema is to realize the category
as well as restricting its use (legitimation and limitation). Kant establishes that human
experience has a transcendental temporal structure.
- Then, Kant goes on presenting a taxonomy of schemata in accordance with the four
classes of categories: quantity, quality, relation and modality.
Quantity: schema of magnitude = time series (the concept of number is a
representation that summarizes the successive addition of one homogeneous
unit to another (B 182).
Quality: schema of filled or empty time = content of time.
Relation: order of time. Schema of substance = permanence (duration); schema
of the cause = temporal sequence (succession); schema of community =
simultaneity.
Modality: sum total of time. The scope of time, the circumstance that an object
existsschema of possibility (at some time), schema of actuality 8at a
particular time), schema of necessity (at all time).
Example: the street becoming wet. We have to recognize the street in its both states,
dry and wet as the same subject that underlines the process, as the substance that
undergoes an alteration of accidents. The recognition of a subject presupposes a
duration through time. The relevant schema is the permanence of the real in time
which endures while everything else changes (B 183). We cannot perceive time but
we can perceive a substances changes that come about within it.
Example: it rains, the street becomes wet. We must assert a causal succession, not
only a succession of events in general, but a succession which must be grounded in
the objective situation. This is possible only if events elapse in accordance with a
precise rule: causality.
Axioms of Intuition
The overall meaning of this proof is the justification of mathematics as the science of
magnitude. Kant wants to prove that mathematics, as a science of magnitude, is
fundamental for the knowledge of nature. Since nature is magnitude mathematics
turns out to be constitutive for nature (Kants main transcendental thesis).
The second step is to refine the concept of magnitude that is relevant here.
Mathematics is concerned with determined magnitudes, that is, magnitudes capable
of mathematisation (precise quantities). All nature turns out to be a sum of
mathematically determinable quantities (in the spirit of Galileo and modern physics).
The proof goes like this:
1a. space and time underline all appearances;
1b. determination of space and time rest upon the synthesis of the
homogeneous (main acquisition of the deduction of the categories);
2. the consciousness of the homogeneous manifold of the intuition is the
concept of magnitude (it identifies the consciousness of the homogeneous
with the concept of magnitude);
3. all appearances are magnitudes, more precisely, extensive magnitudes;
Extension is thus represented as a whole composed of parts which can be composed
in a sequence of composing processes. Kant says that all intuitions are perceived as
aggregates (B 204) and this in turn bring us to mathematics: On this successive
synthesis of the productive imagination, in the generation of shapes, is grounded the
mathematics of extension with its axioms (B 204).
But here Kant is concerned with the transcendental aspect of the story, that is, the
conditions of sensible intuition a priori. So, he is not properly concerned with axioms
per se but with meta-axiom which expresses their a priori conditions: nature is
intuitively given / so spatio-temporally extended /then objectivity is bound to
quantity /and quantity is bound to extensive magnitudes. In conclusion, every single
appearance is a case of applied mathematics (the science of quantity and extension).
Example: numerical formulas vs. axioms.
Anticipations of perceptions
Perception is a representation accompanied by sensation (empirical consciousness).
Sensation gives the material, the stuff, for some object in general (B 207). This is
continuous with what Kant have said before. The problem now is this: how can we
represent the objectivity of perceptions? Is there any such objectivity or should we
believe that perception is always a subjective process?
Kant states that even perception has an objective character because is bound to an a
priori pre-condition: anticipation. Anticipation means a type of sensation that
underlies the different individual sensations. Anticipation is a kind of pre-empirical
moment, an intensive magnitude (so a magnitude again) that exerts a degree of
influence on the senses. This means that every sensation has a strength, a degree,
and can be located on a scale. Kant speaks of anticipations in the plural, because
that strength depends on the type of object and sensory qualities.
Analogies of Experience
- Kant starts to elucidate dynamical principles of the understanding. As is made clear
by the table below, the Analytic of Principle develops a sort of internal climax with
regard to knowledge. There are four different, and increasingly complex, levels of
knowledge: intuition, perception, experience and empirical thinking.
Intuition = offers spatio-temporal magnitudes (without furnishing any reality per
se)
Perception = sensory contents which furnish substantive realities of a certain
kinds
Experience = those realities are then connected with one another according to
some a priori rules
Empirical thinking = and finally constitute proper cognition
Now is quite clear why Kants whole enterprise could be read as a metaphysics of
experience. It turns out that to experience something is to connect perceptions in
some relevant ways, that is, following certain rules given by the understanding
(through the mediation of schemata in accordance with the categories of relation). So,
experience is a product of understanding not of perception or sensory faculty alone.
- In this section, Kant demonstrates that our experience is not a juxtaposition of
manifold of perception (B 219), but is a structured whole capable of objectivity. This is
a crucial step in Kants argument, because allows him to speak of nature as an
interconnected single whole.
- Analogy means relationship of equivalence and has its origin in mathematics. So,
here Kant is concerned with connections and relations, not with individual objects
(which were indeed the subject of the previous section). This in part explains why Kant
thinks that dynamical principles have only a regulative status with regard to
experience (B 222): individual objects are objectively given through perception, but
experience begins when these perceptions are properly connected with one another.
So, dynamical principles cannot constitute objects (even if we might say that they
constitute experience as a whole, see B 692), but only regulate the relations between
intuitions.
- We can represent an analogy as an equation: a : b = b : c, or a : b = c : d. Given the
value of the elements, we can discover the missing one. For example, 2 : 4 = 4 : x, x =
8. In the field of experience, we can discover an event if we know the events to which
it is related. The primary conditions for the objectivity of a sequence of events is
certainly time (the unifying apperception of I-think). But since time cannot be
perceived, the objective connection can only be ascertained through rules governing
connection itself. So, we have, according to Kant, three rules, or analogies, in
accordance with three modes of time: persistence, causal succession and reciprocity in
simultaneity.
The order in which the three principles are presented is also meaningful:
1. requires us to recognize alterations in a permanent substance,
2. which is the condition for grasping sequences as causal effects (e.g. a stone
heated by the sun),
3. which in turn makes possible to recognize reciprocal and coexisting causal
relations.
Anticipations of
Perceptions
Analogies of Experience
Postulates of Empirical
Thinking in general
First Analogy
The argument stated by the Proof (first paragraph of the text added in B) goes
roughly like this:
a. that things change is a matter of fact, we experience changes,
b. without a fixed and unchangeable background (substratum) there is no hope
to establish objective knowledge of the change,
c. TIME is the condition of the representation of all change (bringing all
manifolds to the unity through the synthesis of the apperception or I-think)
because id the persistent form of inner intuition (B 224),
d. but TIME cannot be perceived
e. so, the substratum cannot be TIME in s,
f. we must search that substratum in the objects of perception,
g. what do not change in the objects of perception, and is therefore persistent,
is substance,
h. that substance underlies all change in appearances and turns out to be the
necessary condition of bringing a multiplicity of perceptions into the unified
form of experience.
The persistence of substance, which gives general expression to time as the constant
correlate of all existence of appearances, all change.. (B 226), is the condition of
possibility of the perceptions of a change in things, and so it makes possible to
perceive relations of succession and simultaneity. The underlying substance of things
makes possible to speak of duration of things in existence.
This conclusion permits to clarify the concept of change itself. Change means only
alteration with respect to the determinations or accidents of substances that are
permanent. Change is not a passage from non-being to being (B 230).
The point is particularly relevant with regard to the distinction between appearances
and things in themselves. We experience change in appearances not in things in
themselves. Kant links his discussion of permanence with the major principle of
transcendental idealism. If change would be applicable to things in themselves, we
should infer that any new alteration correspond to a creation of an entirely new thing
in the world. The creation of things in time would destroy the unity of time itself, and
so, the unity of our sensible experience (B 229). With this remark, Kant simply denies
that we can ground knowledge on a theological principle (Gods creation of things),
and indirectly supports his Copernican Turn.
Second Analogy
- Humes conception of causality: we acquire causal relations from experience.
Experience, according to Hume, contains only a sequence of events without necessary
connection. All that we might say is that there are some regularities. Such a stable
connection, as implied by the concept of a cause related to an effect, is a product of
imagination which leads us, through customary association, to expect regularities. So,
Empirical Thinking
The Postulates deal with nature as a whole and apply to three specific levels or
modalities of reality: possibility, actuality and necessity. These modalities are
conditions of experience, so have epistemological significance (and also
methodological), not metaphysical.
1. POSSIBILITY = we have to add to the formal principle of contradiction, the
principle of sensible intuition. If an event does not contradict the former and
satisfy the latter, then it is an empirically possible object of experience.
2. ACTUALITY = the mark of the reality of an object or event is perception (even
in cases such that of magnetism, electricity and gravitation we can perceive
their effects)
3. NECESSITY = the connections of our experience is necessary when it is
determined in accordance with the universal conditions of experience itself.
forms a connected whole in accordance with empirical laws. In a sense, the laws of
nature, elucidated by the Principles of the Empirical Thinking, are constitutive for outer
experience. Only the cooperation of spatio-temporal intuitions and understanding can
ground the unity of experience and permits us to describe what is represented in
accordance with empirical laws as an actual rather than merely imagined object.
On the ground of the distinction of all objects in general into Phenomena and
Noumena
The following section, Phenomena and Noumena, was in part emended for the second
edition. It consolidates the conclusion reached in the Aesthetic: that all the knowledge
we might have is knowledge of appearances, and it goes on to precise further the
limitation in the application of the categories.
The main thesis is that there is only one legitimate use of the categories: the
empirical use. The transcendental use of the categories is illegitimate.
The distinction bears emphasis on a negative result with respect to metaphysics,
contesting the presumption of ontology to furnish synthetic a priori knowledge of
things (B 303).
Knowledge of things in themselves is impossible even with respect to mathematics
and Euclidean geometry (as for theoretical astronomy).
The distinction again enforced Kants polemic with rationalism and empiricism.
Against the former, Kant says that concepts of the understanding cannot furnish
knowledge without reference to empirical sensibility, while against the latter he
reaffirms that there are concepts of the understanding that are independent from
sensibility.
The concepts of a thing in itself is to be considered from an epistemological point of
view:
In a first sense, the concept of a thing in itself expresses a LIMITING CONDITION
on the scope of our knowledge. Things in themselves are not ontological
objects: since our knowledge depends on sensible intuition, there cannot be
knowable objects in a super-sensible world as correlate of an intellectual faculty
of intuition (against rationalism). Noumena are things utterly unknown to us.
In contrast to empiricism, however, we should recognize that the concept of a
thing in itself is not self-contradictory, because sensibility is directed toward
appearance.
Things in themselves do not have any POSITIVE SIGNIFICANCE. They do not
express a further or second level of reality. Nevertheless, they do have reality in
the moral domain, and have an interesting EURISTHIC meaning in the theory of
scientific research.
- Along with the empirical use of the categories, which constitutes the basis of the
possibility of experience and meaningfulness of scientific discourse, there is a third
use: LOGICAL or TRANSCENDENTAL SIGNIFICANCE (B 305, as opposed to
transcendental use beyond experience). Categories cannot be employed without
any reference to sensibility. They have meaning (empirical content) when (1) they
can be referred to the forms of judgment (and hence schemata), (2) to be
determinate, they must be referred to something coming from sensible experience.
Provided all this, we might say that Kant is not a verificationist. Pure concepts have
their own transcendental or logical meaning even if they do not are applied to
sensible contents. When all material from sensibility is simply lacking, pure concepts
have a cognitive but not a semantic deficit.
In that context, finds its meaning the issue of the dialectical illusion. Categories, by
their very nature, prompt to go beyond experience (at least in their transcendental
and logical significance; see B 186-187). That supposed extension of their employment
has two consequences: (1) they allow us to think, by means of the imagination, our
sensible experience beyond its actual realization; on the other hand, (2) they press us
toward the discovery or knowledge, entirely illusory, of the things in themselves.
We may draw these conclusions:
a) we have no knowledge of noumena, and have knowledge only of phenomena
or appearances.
b) we are sometimes tempted, by virtue of our conceptual capacities, to think
that knowledge of noumena is attainable; this temptation can be explained and
diagnosed by distinguishing the semantic and the cognitive scope of concepts
(B 186-187).
c) Those temptations, and their explanation and correction, are distinctively
philosophical matters (B 296-297). The transcendental distinction between
things as they appear and things as they are is not our ordinary empirical
distinction between the way objects may appear to us and the way they actually
are (B 3)13).
d) Despite (a) we can take it for granted that this things beyond our cognitive
powers may very well exist (B 309). We cannot know such things, but by the
same token we do not know that they do not exist and cannot rationally deny
their existence (B 344). The concept of a noumenon is for us acceptable only in
that negative sense as a problematic, not assertoric, concept (B 308-9, 31011, 342-44).
e) In the negative, problematic sense, the concept of a noumenon is not an
arbitrary invention but something we are bound to conceive as a correlate of
appearance, which functions only as a limiting concept (B xxvi-xxvii, B 310311).
The Dialectic is the most critical part of the Critique with respect to the traditional
metaphysics. Traditional or special metaphysics (God, soul, freedom or theology,
psychology, cosmology) becomes in the last section of the Dialectic, a general theory
of scientific investigation and a preparation for a new approach to moral demands. The
task of the Dialectic is to limiting the pretension of knowledge with respect to the
faculty of reason. The result is that there isnt knowledge of intelligible objects or
objects of reason such as God, soul, freedom, and the world as a totality.
- Lets confront Analytic and Dialectic. In a certain sense, the Dialectic keeps up
Analytics general approach to metaphysics. The Analytic has reduced the function of
general metaphysics into a mere analytic of the pure understanding. Dialectic engages
in a detailed exploration of the origins of our belief in illusory knowledge, provides a
careful analysis of the features common to all special metaphysical projects. By
discovering that all our metaphysical knowledge is illusory, it confirms the results of
the Analytic.
There is another way to state the continuity between Analytic and Dialectic. Analytic is
a grammar of thought; Dialectic shows that this grammar is oriented, internally and
necessarily, to a theory of the unconditioned, and thus to special metaphysics, but it
remains nonetheless a grammar of thought, not a knowledge of thought.
The Dialectic develops a transcendental logic which is required to explain both why
metaphysics is necessary and why it necessarily produces illusions of truth.
- the structure of the Dialectic resembles that of the Analytic:
Metaphysical deduction = Book I, discovery of the central elements of reason
(ideas)
Transcendental deduction = Book II, justification of the use of ideas
But since ideas provide only apparent and illusionary knowledge, the discovery and
the explanation have to do principally with the dialectical illusion, not with the
possibility of their application to intuition (so we dont have a proper justification here).
In other words, Kant need not to prove that ideas are pure a priori elements of reason
since that character intrinsically belong to them, and dont need to justify their
application to experience since they are not congruent with anything belonging to
experience. What Kant has to do is solely to expound a system of them.
- Kants relation with Plato and Aristotle. The discussion of the meaning of the term
idea in the Dialectic, with reference to its origin in the philosophy of Plato,
represents a lyrical attempt to capture the spirit of Platos moral and political
enterprise, with particular reference to the Republic. While Kant refuses to accept the
speculative meaning Plato has attached to ideas, he certainly embraces the spirit of
the moral and political significance of Platos project. Analytic follows Aristotle in
naming categories the pure concepts of the understanding (B 105). Kant shows a
great deal of respect with regard to Plato and Aristotle.
- reason is the faculty of the unconditioned, it has a natural interest in searching for a
supreme and comprehensive unity in all our knowledge. While concepts bring unity to
the manifold of intuition under judgments, reason brings unity to the manifold of
judgment under principles by drawing inferences (B 366). Ideas are concepts that
are obtained through inference.
As there are three kinds of judgment of relation, so there are three kinds of inference
which corresponds to three ideas, that is, three way of interpreting the relation
between the conditioned and the unconditioned.
Categorical j. = concerns the relation of the predicate to the subject. The
unconditioned is to be find in a subject which is no longer itself a predicate; the
idea of a subject as such, the soul or absolute unity of the thinking subject
(rational psychology).
Hypothetical j. = concerns the relation between ground and consequent. The
unconditioned consists in the ultimate and final term of a series; a
presupposition that does not presuppose nothing, the idea of a totality of things,
with its related topic of freedom (transcendental cosmology).
Disjunctive j. = concerns the relations of parts within a system. The
unconditioned consists in the absolute unity of all beings in a single subject, the
idea of GOD (natural theology).
The corresponding fallacies (remember that in the Dialectic Kant deals with the logic of
illusion not with the logic of truth, so here inferences become fallacies) are also three:
Para-logism = infers from the transcendental subject to the absolute unity of the
subject as real.
Anti-nomies = infer from the totality of all think to contradictory conclusions
which struggles to establish the correctness of their own view.
Ideal = infers from the totality of conditions under which all objects are thought,
to the actual existence of this reality (God as absolute highest being).
Note that the title of the last chapter, The Ideal of Pure Reason is not meant to refer
to a fallacy, but is focused on the positive aspect of the idea of a totality of knowledge.
- Kant critic of ideology. The three fallacies violates the a priori conditions of
knowledge and thus represent a case of transcendental illusion, rather than merely
sophistical. In this respect, Dialectic performs a radical critique of ideology. As such, is
directed against the monopoly of the Schools (B xxxii). The task of the Dialectic, in
this respect, is to fully expound the theory of experience so that reason can be
liberated from illusion.
The Kantian attempts has two related positive aspect:
1) ideas can serve to correct both rationalism and empiricism. In contrast with
rationalism, ideas forfeited all cognitive content, and, in contrast with empiricism, they
keep a regulative function, that is, to order the fragments of reality into a whole. In
this way, ideas give the goal of a constantly advancing process of scientific
investigation whose end functions like an horizon.
2) ideas carry a peculiar moral character. Since the existence of God and freedom
cannot be dispelled, we can counter the opposing positions (materialism, atheism,
superstition, etc, B xxxiv f.). Remember the Preface B xxxi. The positions Kant alludes
in the Preface B corresponds to the three main fallacies (materialism and free-thinking
correspond to paralogism, fatalism and fanaticism to the antinomies, atheism and
superstition to the ideal).
In so doing, Kant clears the way for a good metaphysics that concerns itself with the
theoretical clarification of scientific investigation and with practical demands of
morality in a proper way (a new metaphysics of freedom).
Paralogisms
- I will not take up the overall significance of Kants theory of mind; more modestly, Im
going to offer a reading of the Paralogisms chapter as it figures in B edition of the
Critique.
Some preliminary notes, which are necessary to fully appreciate Kants task and might
clarify the overall meaning of the section:
Sensibility and understanding are complementary sources of knowledge, the
first is receptive, the second active.
The forms of intuition and understanding have pre-empirical validity.
Our sensory impressions are subject to various level of elaboration and
unification.
We can only know appearances not things in themselves.
These preliminary points, already discussed above, should bring us to consider the
difference between the I think as the transcendental unity of self-consciousness,
along with its functional and transcendental role of vehicle of categories, from the
empirical assertion I exist as a thinking being. The I think cannot be cognize and,
for that reason, it is not a distinct substance. Clarifying that distinction is the main task
of Kants Paralogisms.
- Kant introduces the first class of sophistical syllogisms in B398. He describes that
kind of syllogisms as unavoidable inferences of reason which give objective reality to
something of which we have no concept (B397). In particular, a paralogism, is a
syllogism which infers from the formal unity of the subject to the real existence of it.
As such, paralogisms contain a fourfold fallacy, derived from the mistaken application
of the table of the category to the I think: according to substance The soul is a
substance. According to quality The soul is in its quality simple. According to
quantity The soul retains unity over time as numerically identical. According to
relation The soul is an immaterial thing (because we can doubt the existence of
external things but not of our own thought). These statements are part of a pseudoscience called rational psychology which has as its main topic the demonstration of
the existence and character of the soul. Kant is going to contest it by arguing that we
cannot cognize the soul.
- the basic paralogism that bolster the illusion is this:
(M) What cannot be thought otherwise than as subject does not exist otherwise
than as subject, and is therefore substance;
(m) Now a thinking being, considered merely as such, cannot be thought
otherwise than as subject.
(C) Therefore it also exists only as such a thing, i.e., as substance.
It clearly is a fallacy of equivocation. In (M) thought means something which might
be given to intuition (as an objective ego object of inner experience), whereas in (m)
thought refers solely to the form of the subject, its transcendental function of
unifying cognitions in the unity of consciousness. We are confronted with a categorical
error, a sophisma figurae dictionis, which breaks down in four related mistaken
inferences.
Kant says that this inference is unavoidable because in a certain sense is natural, or
reasonable, to think that a subject is a substance, but according to the lesson of the
Analytic, this is not the case with respect to I-think. The only things that can be said of
it are: (i) it is always a subject and never a predicate; (ii) it is a logically simple subject;
(iii) it remains identical with itself with respect to any manifold; (iv) it is distinct from
external things. Until we learn the lesson of the Analytic, that no objective self is
possible without sensible intuition, we are inclined to fall victims of the fallacious
inference.
Kants way to refute the paralogism in question is to underline the fact that one of the
condition of application of the category of substance to a manifold is persistence.
Now, we have no persisting intuition of our inner state, so of ourselves as inner object.
So, the category of substance cannot properly apply to the I, which retains only the
consciousness of our thinking. (B 412-413). This is of course a criticism we may raise
only against the grain of the Analytic.
- Kants discussion of the paralogisms deals also with two related topics: (1) the
purported demonstration of the immortality of the soul, and (2) with the alleged
claim that it is possible to doubt only the existence of the external world.
The first target is represented by Mendelssohns Phaedo. Mendelssohn
maintains that the soul has intensive, not extensive, magnitude (it cannot be
divided into parts), so cannot disappear through a process of division or
separation. Kants reply is that, even granted the former point concerning the
intensive character of mind, the latter cannot follow. It is possible that the soul
expires due to a process of gradual remission of all its powers or
elanguescence (B 414). The simplicity of the soul cannot be identified with its
timeless essence or continuity.
The second point concerns the relation with Descartes picture of self-awareness
and self-knowledge. The analytic proposition according to which the I of
apperception,., is a single thing that cannot be resolved into a plurality of
subjects cannot imply the synthetic conclusion that that same I is a substance.
The same is true if we consider the analytic proposition that I distinguish my
own existence from other things outside me (B 409); it does not follow from
that the synthetic proposition that Im a thinking being of which only I can have
certain knowledge.
Kant recognizes the unique character of self-consciousness without reifying it or
hypostasising it; he recognizes the privileged access of first person experience, but
this is entirely an empirical question.
- Kant didnt mean to derive disastrous consequences from his critics of rational
psychology. Actually, Kant intends to provide a better alternative to traditional
metaphysics of the soul, one that would be capable of better support a morality of
freedom. Rational psychology, he says, cannot be a doctrine but a discipline,
setting impassable boundaries for speculative reason in this field (B421). Both
materialism and spiritualism fall within the illusion generated by the paralogism. Only
in the practical domain the question of the immortality could find a solution.
infinite series in which each term is conditioned and only the series as a whole is
unconditioned (antithesis). Kant applies this distinction to the four classes of
categories he expounded in the table of the categories: quantity, quality, relation and
modality. Then, as in the chapter on the Principles, Kant divides the four classes in two
part, the first two are named mathematical, the second two dynamical. We have
therefore four antinomies or for pairs of contradictory inferences. The four theses are
typically endorsed by rationalism, while the antitheses by empiricism.
- The conflict between rationalists and empiricists, and so the conflict of reason within
itself, cannot be resolved by recurring to experience. This may lead reason to
skepticism, which according to Kant, undermines the foundations of all cognition, in
order, if possible, to leave no reliability or certainty anywhere. (B 451). Kants
preferred method is the skeptical method, which is to be kept separate from
skepticism. Kant assumes the role of the impartial referee (B 451), and accept the
initial outcome of the conflict: neither side decisively defeats the other. Kant therefore
recognize that there are good grounds for both of the conflicting positions. The
skeptical method consists in an investigation on whether the object of the dispute is
not perhaps a mere mirage at which each would snatch in vain without being able to
gain anything even if he met with no resistance.. (B 451). The method allows Kant to
raise an objection against both the alternatives: their approaches say more then they
know. Transcendental idealism can show that they are both wrong, or, more carefully,
that they both reach only a part of the truth.
In the second part of the chapter, which covers roughly sections from three to six,
Kant expounds the antinomies along with their contradictory consequences.
THESIS
QUANTITY
The world has a beginning in time, and in
space it is also enclosed in boundaries.
QUALITY
Every composite substance in the world
consists of simple parts, and nothing
exists anywhere except the simple or
what is composed of simples.
RELATION
Causality in accordance with laws of
nature is not the only one from which all
the appearances of the world can be
derived. It is also necessary to assume
another causality through freedom in
order to explain them.
MODALITY
To the world there belongs something
that, either as a part of it or as its cause,
is an absolute necessary being.
ANTITHESIS
The world has no beginning and no
bounds in space, but is infinite with
regard to both time and space.
In the mathematical antinomies, each thesis wrongly assume one of two possible
alternative (one based on the concept of finitude, the other on the concept of
infinitude). Actually, they starts from false presupposition because there could be a
third alternative: that the infinite is not actually given but only potentially given.
The first antinomy is concerned not only with the history of the universe but also with
the history of mankind. The series runs indeterminately far back and is thus indefinite
rather than infinite. Kants reply to the antinomy is that the infinite should be taught
as potentially given rather than actually given.
The second antinomy is concerned with whether the world is composed of ultimately
simple parts or not. Kant suggests a third alternative: material substances do have
parts, but they are divisible into other material substances.
The third antinomy is the most frequently discussed.
In the last part, Kant offers his solution to the problem: transcendental idealism.
Kant follows methodologically ancient skepticism, but instead of resigning himself to a
suspension of judgment, he proposes a constructive solution. Kant is not an observer
of controversies but a critical epistemic judge who offers a new certainty by
recognizing the ultimate ground of the dispute.
The method of the antitheses was well known in the protestant world due to Schultz,
Baier and Anton. The latter, gave a theological explanation of the raising of the
antinomies (contradictions spring from the fallen nature of men or original sin). Kant
dismantles the inner dialectic of faith and offers a critic of ideology.
To recognize that both thesis and antithesis are wrong, we need to draw upon
transcendental idealism: all knowledge requires intuition and cosmological ideas lack
such a reference to sensibility. This lack explains the contradiction and also the lack of
objectivity of the concept involved in the dispute: the word world claims an absolute
completeness, but in fact it cannot have any reference to experience because is never
given as an absolute complete whole within space and time. It can only be thought
and is therefore a noumenon. As Paralogisms, also Antinomies are affected by a
category mistake: they confuse a thing in itself with the sum of all appearances. We
need to bear in mind that nevertheless the word world is not meaningless: is the
idea that guides our empirical research toward the totality of appearances.
Cosmological ideas do not have constitutive status but only regulative status: they
do not describe the way the world is objectively, but the way in which the investigation
of nature advances (subjectively) toward a comprehensive body of knowledge.
Transcendental idealism accomplishes a threefold task: (i) it diagnosis the antinomies;
(ii) overcomes the antinomy itself; (iii) reveals an original regulative function for the
cosmological ideas.
As a conclusion, we might say that Kant is offering here a severe critique of ideology.
Traditional metaphysics has reified ideas, while the first Critique interprets them
dynamically. Kant acknowledges the open-ended character of scientific investigation.