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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter September 5, 2019

Kant’s Transcendental Idealism About Time: a Neglected Alternative

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From the journal Kant-Studien

Abstract

When interpreters orient Kant’s philosophy of time in relation to McTaggart’s distinction among different ways of characterizing a temporal order, they claim that he is best described as endorsing an A series position according to which there is a metaphysically privileged present that determines the past and the future. Whether Kant might also be understood as a proponent of the B series - according to which there is no privileged present, but rather time is comprised of relations of earlier than, later than, and simultaneity - has not been discussed in the literature. I argue that, for Kant, the appearances can be described as an A series, while the phenomena are to be understood as a B series, neither of which is more fundamental than the other. Contra a common approach in the literature that neglects a metaphysical difference between appearances and phenomena, I argue Kant’s transcendental idealism about time is best understood in relation to his account of appearances and phenomena.

Acknowledgments:

Thanks to Lisa Shabel, Julia Jorati, Lisa Downing, Tamar Rudavsky, Clinton Tolley, Conrad Robinson, and Nathan Oaklander for feedback on an earlier draft of this paper. Thanks also to Cord Friebe, Marcello Garibbo, and Andrew Knoll for feedback on a later draft. My engagement with McTaggart in this paper was benefited by a discussion with Valdi Ingthorsson.

Published Online: 2019-09-05
Published in Print: 2019-09-01

© 2019 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

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