Image for Transcendental Epistemology

Transcendental Epistemology

Part of the Elements in Epistemology series
See all formats and editions

Transcendental arguments were prominent in Western philosophy, German idealism, phenomenological tradition, and P.

F. Strawson's thinking. They have fallen out of fashion because of their associations with transcendental idealism and verificationism.

They are still invoked by important figures in the analytic tradition even if the very same tradition has cast doubt on such arguments.

The nature of transcendental arguments remains unclear: Are they supposed to be deductive?

Are they synthetic or analytic? If they are a priori, how are they supposed to be about the empirical world?

What are their relations to necessity, conceivability, and essence?

This Element takes up the challenge of elucidating the nature of transcendental arguments, embedded in the wider context of transcendental epistemology.

It will be argued that the key premise 'transcendental conditional' is synthetic, necessary, and a posteriori.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£14.45 Save 15.00%
RRP £17.00
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1009243829 / 9781009243827
Paperback / softback
141.3
15/02/2024
United Kingdom
English
75 pages.