Full text loading...
USD
-
Transcendental deduction of predicative structure in Kant and Brandom
- Source: Pragmatics & Cognition, Volume 13, Issue 1, Jan 2005, p. 91 - 107
Abstract
Fregean predicates applied to Fregean objects are merely defined by a ‘timeless’ deductive order of sentences. They cannot provide sufficient structure in order to explain how names can refer to objects of intuition and how predicates can express properties of substances that change in time. Therefore, the accounts of Wilson and Quine, Prior and Brandom for temporal judgments fail — and a new reconstruction of Kant’s transcendental logic, especially of the analogies of experience, is needed.
© 2005 John Benjamins Publishing Company