Skoči na glavni sadržaj

Izvorni znanstveni članak

https://doi.org/10.56550/d.1.1.1

Was Kant a Methodological Interpretationist?

Hans Lenk ; Karlsruher Institut für Technologie


Puni tekst: engleski pdf 519 Kb

str. 17-35

preuzimanja: 90

citiraj

Puni tekst: njemački pdf 297 Kb

str. 17-18

preuzimanja: 55

citiraj


Sažetak

This paper examines Kant’s interpretive role of categories (Verstandesbegriffe) on the basis of his assertion in the Prolegomena § 30, where Kant claims that the role of categories is to spell out appearances in order to read them as experience. Kant’s metaphor of “spelling” or even “reading” is just a colloquial expression for the complexities of interpreting reality. The explanatory models that result from the relationship of the categories to the world of experience are conditions of our understanding and cognition of reality. I think we cannot simply hypostatize structures within a reality per se, but we should more sophisticatedly speak only of the hypothetical basic constitution of reality. Indeed, reality as such can only be conceived interpretatively, and the particular epistemological model itself can only be articulated from a higher meta-level of interpretation. We could also say that Kant is concerned with interpretations in the sense of applying given schematic forms or schemata in our use of language, i.e., that he is concerned with scheme-interpretation or schema-impregnation, insofar as the activity of the understanding consists essentially in interpreting experience by means of given schemata. In this paper, Kant’s theory of experience interpretation is supplemented by a more sophisticated distinction of different levels of interpretation and presented in the form of diagrams.

Ključne riječi

Kant; scheme-interpretation; understanding; reality; epistemology

Hrčak ID:

279268

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/279268

Datum izdavanja:

15.6.2022.

Podaci na drugim jezicima: njemački

Posjeta: 412 *