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  1. System of Transcendental Idealism ( German: System des transcendentalen Idealismus) is a book by Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling published in 1800. It has been called Schelling's most important early work, [1] and is best known in the English-speaking world for its influence on the poet and philosopher, Samuel Taylor Coleridge.

    • Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling, Walter Schulz
    • 1800
  2. Transcendental idealism is a philosophical system [1] founded by German philosopher Immanuel Kant in the 18th century. Kant's epistemological program [2] is found throughout his Critique of Pure Reason (1781). By transcendental (a term that deserves special clarification [3]) Kant means that his philosophical approach to knowledge transcends ...

  3. Mar 4, 2016 · Kant’s Transcendental Idealism. First published Fri Mar 4, 2016. In the Critique of Pure Reason Kant argues that space and time are merely formal features of how we perceive objects, not things in themselves that exist independently of us, or properties or relations among them. Objects in space and time are said to be “appearances”, and ...

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  5. Oct 22, 2001 · In the System of Transcendental Idealism Schelling goes back to Fichtean terminology, though he will soon abandon most of it. He endeavours to explain the emergence of the thinking subject from nature in terms of an ‘absolute I’ coming retrospectively to know itself in a ‘history of self-consciousness’ that forms the material of the system.

  6. Learn about the epistemology of Immanuel Kant and his followers, who held that the human self constructs knowledge out of sense impressions and universal concepts. Explore the philosophy of nature, art, and the Absolute in Schelling's System of Transcendental Idealism.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  7. Immanuel Kant. At the foundation of Kant’s system is the doctrine of “transcendental idealism,” which emphasizes a distinction between what we can experience (the natural, observable world) and what we cannot (“supersensible” objects such as God and the soul). Kant argued that we can only have knowledge of things we can experience.

  8. Immanuel Kant: Transcendental Idealism. Transcendental idealism is one of the most important sets of claims defended by Immanuel Kant (1724–1804), in the Critique of Pure Reason. According to this famous doctrine, we must distinguish between appearances and things in themselves, that is, between that which is mind-dependent and that which is not.

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