Table of Contents
Critique of Pure ReasonPeter Suber, Philosophy Department, Earlham College You have the long version of the table of contents in your book. Here's an overview of the organization of the most important sections. It should help you orient yourself and see the forest through the trees.
B EditionN.K. Smith trans.
St. Martin's Press, 1929W.S. Pluhar trans.
Hackett Pub. Co., 1996Guyer & Wood trans.
Cambridge UP, 1997Elements 31 63 69 153 Aesthetic 33 65 71 155 Logic 74 92 105 193 Analytic 89 102 117 201 Concepts 90 103 118 202 Clue/Guide 91 104 119 204 Deduction 116 120 141 219 Principles 169 176 204 267 Schematism 176 180 209 271 System 187 188 220 278 Axioms 202 197 233 286 Anticipations 207 201 238 290 Analogies 218 208 247 295 Postulates 265 239 283 321 Phenomena/Noumena 294 257 303 338 Amphiboly 316 276 323 366 Dialectic 349 297 346 384 Concepts 366 308 359 394 Inferences 396 327 380 409 Paralogisms 399 328 382 411 Antinomies 432 384 442 459 Ideal 595 485 560 551 Method 733 571 663 625 Discipline 736 574 665 628 Canon 823 629 728 672 Architectonic 860 653 755 691
This file is an electronic hand-out for the course, Kant.
Peter Suber,
Department of Philosophy,
Earlham College, Richmond, Indiana, 47374, U.S.A.
peters@earlham.edu. Copyright © 1999, 2000, Peter Suber.