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Relationalism about Perception vs. Relationalism about Perceptuals

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 June 2016

Andrew Stephenson*
Affiliation:
Humboldt University, Berlin

Abstract

There is a tension at the heart of Lucy Allais’s new account of Kant’s transcendental idealism. The problem arises from her use of two incompatible theories in contemporary philosophy – relationalism about perception, or naïve realism, and relationalism about colour, or more generally relationalism about any such perceptual property. The problem is that the former requires a more robust form of realism about the properties of the objects of perception than can be accommodated in the partially idealistic framework of the latter. On Allais’s interpretation, Kant’s notorious attempt to balance realism and idealism remains unstable.

Type
Author Meets Critics
Copyright
© Kantian Review 2016 

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References

Allais, L. (2015) Manifest Reality: Kant’s Idealism and his Realism. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stephenson, A. (2015) ‘Kant on the Object-Dependence of Intuition and Hallucination’. Philosophical Quarterly, 65(260), 486508.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stephenson, A. (forthcoming) ‘Imagination and Inner Intuition’. In Gomes, A. and Stephenson, A. (eds) Kant and the Philosophy of Mind (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar