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Einstein and Kant

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 November 2005

Friedel Weinert
Affiliation:
University of Bradford

Abstract

The paper aims to explain and illustrate why Einstein and Kant, relativity and transcendental idealism, came to be discussed in one breath after the Special theory of relativity had emerged in 1905. There are essentially three points of contact between the theory of relativity and Kant's objective idealism. The Special theory makes contact with Kantian views of time; the General theory requires a non-Kantian view of geometry; but both relativity theories endorse a quasi-Kantian view of the nature of scientific knowledge. The paper shows that Einstein is a Kantian in his insistence on the synthesis of rationalism and empiricism, but not in the details of his physics.

Type
Brief Report
Copyright
© The Royal Institute of Philosophy 2005

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