Kant and the other of necessity - contingency

Authors

  • Violetta L. WAIBEL Universität Wien

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36311/2318-0501/2024.v12n1.p245

Keywords:

Kant, contingency

Abstract

Kant’s critical philosophy is, as is well known, based on the question of the possibility of synthetic judgments a priori. This goes hand in hand with the validity claims of judgments in cognition, morality, law, aesthetics and other philosophical areas that can be shown to be necessary. The degree of necessity differs depending on the context. Central to Kant’s epistemology is the objectively necessary validity of causal judgments, which he grounded anew and in distinction to the subjectively necessary judgments that he attributed to David Hume’s causal theory. Necessity, a priori validity of pure or, for the most part, non-pure synthetic judgements a priori in the context of experience are inconceivable without their other, empiricism and contingency. Contingency plays a less marginal role in Kant’s epistemology in the Critique of Pure Reason, than it might seem at first glance. Contingency is of obvious importance in Kant’s teleology, which he elaborates in the second part of the Critique of the Power of Judgement. Nature is characterized by infinite variety and an infinite number of empirical laws, and therefore contingency is predominant for human cognition. With the (apparent) antinomy of teleological judgement, the reciprocal relationship between (necessary) causal mechanism and finality as teleological expediency Kant shows that the two principles are indispensable for knowledge and observation of nature, even if they each have their own tasks.

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Author Biography

  • Violetta L. WAIBEL, Universität Wien

    Violetta L. Waibel from 2009 to 2023 was Professor of European Philosophy at the University of Vienna. Most relevant publications: Hölderlin und Fichte. 1794–1800 (Paderborn 2000); Es gibt Kunstwerke – wie sind sie möglich? (Org. with Konrad P. Liessmann, München 2014); Spinozas Affektenlehre und ihre Rezeption im Deutschen Idealismus, der Romantik und der Moderne (Org., Hamburg 2012); Fichte und Sartre über Freiheit. Das Ich und der Andere (Org., Berlin/New York 2015). Organized the 30th International Hegel Congress in Vienna (Hegels Antwort auf Kant) in April 2014 and the 12th International Kant Congress (Natur und Freiheit) in September 2015 in Vienna; Natur und Freiheit. Akten des XII. Internationalen Kant-Kongresses, 5 Vol. (Org. with Margit Ruffing and David Wagner, Berlin 2019); Ein Zeichen sind wir, deutungslos‘. Hölderlin lesen, Ikkyū Sōjun hören, Musik denken (Göttingen 2020); Verwandlungen. Dichter als Leser Kants (Co-org., Göttingen 2023). Organized interdisciplinary Concert-Symposia (Reihe: Wort – Ton – Gestalt) among others with the Klangforum Wien; Wien Modern; Wiener Konzerthaus; ESSL Museum Klosterneuburg: 2011 and 2016 on Hölderlin/Sōjun/Zender; 2015 on Celan/Birtwistle; 2017 on Kafka/Kurtág; 2018 on voice with Salome Kammer; 2020 on Hölderlin/Hegel/Beethoven, 2022 on Kants Critik der Urtheilskraft. Numerous contributions to theoretical philosophy (Consciousness, Subjectivity, Intersubjectivity, Space and Time), in relation to cognition and emotion, as well as esthetics in Kant, German Idealism, the Romanticists and the Moderns.

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Published

2024-07-15

Issue

Section

Artigos / Articles

How to Cite

WAIBEL, Violetta L. Kant and the other of necessity - contingency. Kantian Studies (EK), Marília, SP, v. 12, n. 1, p. 245, 2024. DOI: 10.36311/2318-0501/2024.v12n1.p245. Disponível em: https://revistas.marilia.unesp.br/index.php/ek/article/view/16265.. Acesso em: 21 nov. 2024.