1st Edition

Limits of Intelligibility Issues from Kant and Wittgenstein

Edited By Jens Pier Copyright 2023
320 Pages
by Routledge

320 Pages
by Routledge

320 Pages
by Routledge

The chapters in this volume investigate the question of where, and in what sense, the bounds of intelligible thought, knowledge, and speech are to be drawn. Is there a way in which we are limited in what we think, know, and say? And if so, does this mean that we are constrained— that there is something beyond the ken of human intelligibility of which we fall short? Or is there another way... Read more

Introduction: Where Intelligibility Gives Out Jens Pier

Part I: Limits Assessed

1. Metaphysical Dissatisfaction Barry Stroud

2. The Bounds of Sense A. W. Moore

Part II: Limits in Kant

3. Kant on Why We Cannot Even Judge about Things in Themselves Guido Kreis

4. The "Original" Form of Cognition: On Kant’s Hylomorphism Andrea Kern

5. Logical and Moral Aliens Within Us: Kant on Theoretical and Practical Self-Conceit G. Anthony Bruno

Part III: Limits in Wittgenstein

6. Wittgenstein on the Limits of Language Hans Sluga

7. The Threefold Puzzle of Negation and the Limits of Sense Jean-Philippe Narboux

8. Truth and the Limits of Ethical Thought: Reading Wittgenstein with Diamond Gilad Nir

Part IV: Limits Reconsidered

9. On Transcending the Limits of Language Graham Priest

10. Art, Authenticity, and Understanding David Suarez

11. No Limit: On What Thought Can Actually Do Jocelyn Benoist

12. On the Speculative Form of Holistic Reflection: Hegel’s Criticism of Kant’s Limitations of Reason Pirmin Stekeler-Weithofer.

Index

Biography

Jens Pier is a doctoral candidate in philosophy at the University of Leipzig, Germany. His current research focuses on metaphysics, the philosophy of self-consciousness, Kant, Wittgenstein, and the prospects for a critical philosophical methodology. In thinking about these issues, he puts special emphasis on how a proper articulation of the self-conscious structure of human mindedness might elucidate the relation between conceptions of philosophy aimed at systematicity and scientificity on the one hand, and those aimed at diagnosis, therapy, or explication on the other.