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    Knowledge requires both intuition and concept — Carmelics
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    Supports→Reason's transcendental ideas of the unconditioned can never provide theoretical knowledge of any object

    Knowledge requires both intuition and concept

    SkepticismTruth & Knowledge
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    SkepticismTruth & Knowledge

    Key Terms

    knowledge(Distinguished from mere true belief, which may be the product of indoctrination and need not exercise deliberative capacities.)
    Justified true belief — true belief that has been arrived at through the exercise of deliberative capacities, including comparison of and deliberation among alternatives.

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Modality & Possibility2 linkedNatural Theology1 linked

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    Intuition is always conditioned — the representation of any region of space is c...Reason forms ideas of unconditioned entities (the self as substance, a completed...Reason's transcendental ideas of the unconditioned can never provide theoretical...Therefore these ideas outrun the limits of intuition

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    Inductive intuition only leads to concepts and never to propositions83%Phenomena must appear to us through specific forms of intuition and co...82%There is a meaningful distinction between using intuitions as an initi...80%Kantian intuition is inductive and only yields concepts, never proposi...80%

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    The Transcendental Dialectic, the second half of the Critique of Pure Reason in which Kant provides the critique of traditional metaphysics is explicitly intended to give an indirect proof of transcendental idealism (B xx). Specifically, the middle section of the Dialectic, entitled “The Antinomy of Pure Reason”, is supposed to provide this indirect proof. All three sections of the Dialectic, thus the preceding “Paralogisms of Pure Reason” and the following “Ideal of Pure Reason”, are supposed t

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