Critique of Pure Reason by Immanuel Kant
This philosophical work delves into the nature and limits of human knowledge, proposing that while our knowledge begins with experience, it doesn't necessarily arise out of experience. The author argues that pure reason itself has the ability to contribute to our knowledge and understanding of the universe. He further explores the concept of metaphysics, asserting that while it is possible, it is also severely limited by the human mind's ability to comprehend it.
The 350th greatest book of all time
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- Published
- 1781
- Nationality
- German
- Length
- Long
- Pages
- 500-800
- Original Language
- German
- Avg User Rating
-
(4.3)
- Alternate Titles
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- A Tiszta ész Kritikája
- Critica della ragion pura
- Critique de la raison pure
- Crítica da razão pura
- Crítica de la razón pura
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This book is on the following 11 lists:
- 101 of the World's Greatest Books (1950) (101 of the World's Greatest Books (Book))
- 50 Greatest Books of All Time (Globe and Mail)
- 72 Philosophy Books Everyone Should Read (The Institute of Art and Ideas)
- Best Philosophy Books of All Time (Fivebooks)
- Inteliquest's World's 100 Greatest Books of All-Time (InteliQuest)
- Masterpieces of World Literature (Frank N. Magill)
- The 100 Greatest Non-Fiction Books (The Guardian)
- The 100 Most Influential Books Ever Written (Martin Seymour-Smith)
- The 50 Most Influential Books of All Time (Open Education Database)
- The Twenty Greatest Philosophy Books (Book from 2006) (James Garvey)
- Twenty Books that Changed the World (The Guardian)