Imagination as a “Medium” in the Critique of Pure Reason

The Monist 72 (2):209-221 (1989)
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Abstract

It is difficult to know what sense to make of Kant’s apparent assignment, in the Critique of Pure Reason, of imagination to a kind of middle position between intuition and understanding. Kant himself appears unsure about it. Sometimes he sees imagination as responsible for one or more varieties of a sub-intellectual “synthesis” of intuitions

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Richard E. Aquila
University of Tennessee, Knoxville

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