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7 - Critique, Deduction, and the Fact of Reason

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2013

Guido Antônio de Almeida
Affiliation:
University of Rio de Janeiro
Frederick Rauscher
Affiliation:
Michigan State University
Daniel Omar Perez
Affiliation:
University of Parana, Brazil
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Summary

Kant's Critique of Practical Reason differs in a striking way from his other critical works, since it does not include what he calls a “deduction” of the principles of the criticized faculty, that is, a proof of the objective validity of its a priori principles. To be sure, one finds there the chapter “On the Deduction of the Principles of Pure Practical Reason.” However, the aim of this chapter is not exactly that of working out a deduction of these principles but, instead, to show that, in a critique of practical reason, such a deduction is in fact impossible, and, indeed, not only impossible but also dispensable, since what has to be ensured by a deduction in the other critical works is guaranteed in the present one by recourse to a so-called fact of reason—a mysterious and apparently paradoxical notion that I will discuss in this paper after considering Kant's reasons for discarding a deduction of pure practical principles.

In the earlier Critique of Pure Reason, on the contrary, an essential part of his critical project, which was that of ascertaining the possibility of a priori knowledge, was the deduction of the categories, taken to be pure concepts of the understanding through which one thinks the essential predicates of any object of knowledge as such. Indeed, without such a deduction, the philosopher would be incapable not only of justifying the claim to have a priori knowledge, but he would also be incapable of justifying the claim to know empirical objects as something distinct from the perceptions in which they are given.

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Kant in Brazil , pp. 127 - 154
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2012

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