Phenomenological Interpretation Of Kant's Critique Of Pure Reason by Martin Heidegger

A phenomenological reading of the first Critique, this work argues that transcendental imagination and temporality form the concealed core of the conditions of possibility for experience and objectivity. It reinterprets the transcendental aesthetic, schematism, and analytic of principles to show how categories are grounded in time and the finitude of the knower rather than in a merely formal epistemology. By tracing synthesis to the original unity of time and imagination, it seeks to retrieve a more originary understanding of being underpinning critical philosophy, thereby reorienting the critical project toward fundamental ontology.

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