Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. voted to issues in the philosophy of natural science. Kant was not a “philosopher of science” in the sense now familiar within the Anglo-American tradition – a specialist focused on the nature and methods of scientific inquiry, say, or on the foundations of some particular science, suchasphysicsorbiology ...

  2. Metaphysical Foundations of Natural Science ( German: Metaphysische Anfangsgründe der Naturwissenschaft) is a 1786 book by the philosopher Immanuel Kant . Summary. The book is divided into four chapters. The chapters are concerned with the metaphysical foundations of phoronomy (now called kinematics ), dynamics, mechanics, and phenomenology .

  3. Metaphysical Foundations of Natural Science Immanuel Kant Preface can present anything concerning existence. The necessary propositions involved in natural science, therefore, have to be the concept-based ones that define ‘metaphysics of Nature’. There are two possibilities for what they might be:

  4. Immanuel Kant. Cambridge University Press, 2004 - Physical sciences - 119 pages. Kant was centrally concerned with issues in the philosophy of natural science throughout his career. The...

  5. a Beschaffenheit. signifies a derivation of the manifold belonging to the existence of things from their inner principle) makes necessary a cognition through reason of the interconnection of natural things, insofar as this cognition is to deserve the name of a science. Therefore, the doctrine of nature can be better divided into historical ...

  6. The Metaphysical Foundations of Natural Science presents his most mature reflections on these themes in the context of both his 'critical' philosophy, presented in the Critique of Pure Reason, and the natural science of his time.

  7. 29 de jul. de 2009 · Metaphysical foundations of natural science (1786) On a discovery whereby any new critique of pure reason is to be made superfluous by an older one (1790) What real progress has metaphysics made in Germany since the time of Leibniz and Wolff?