
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2003
Pages: 54-79
Series: Studies in German Idealism
ISBN (Hardback): 9789048163632
Full citation:
, "From Kant to Leibniz?", in: Salomon Maimon: rational dogmatist, empirical skeptic, Berlin, Springer, 2003


From Kant to Leibniz?
Salomon Maimon and the question of predication
pp. 54-79
in: Gideon Freudenthal (ed), Salomon Maimon: rational dogmatist, empirical skeptic, Berlin, Springer, 2003Abstract
In commenting upon Maimon's contribution to the modern theory of knowledge, Cassirer ascribes to him an admirable tour de force.1 He believes that Maimon, grasping in all its profundity the problem of the object of experience as posed by Critical Philosophy, managed to think its solution in a way which, in principle, corresponds to Kant's own in the third Critique. But, according to Cassirer, Maimon did not share Kant's critical reservations; in fact, he transcended them towards Leibniz" idealist metaphysics. Within the multitude of Leibniz" metaphysical theories, he succeeded in isolating the essential, methodologically most significant moment, which also comprises the culmination of seventeenth-century rationalism: the causal definition.
Cited authors
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2003
Pages: 54-79
Series: Studies in German Idealism
ISBN (Hardback): 9789048163632
Full citation:
, "From Kant to Leibniz?", in: Salomon Maimon: rational dogmatist, empirical skeptic, Berlin, Springer, 2003