Roxana Baiasu, Graham Bird, and Adrian W. Moore (eds.): Contemporary Kantian Metaphysics New Essays on Space and Time (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012)
Responding to growing interest in the Kantian tradition and in issues concerning space and time, this volume offers an insightful and original contribution to the literature by bringing together analytical and phenomenological approaches in a productive exchange on topical issues such as action, perception, the body, and cognition and its limits.
Acknowledgements; Notes on the Contributors; Introduction; PART I: PERCEPTION. Kant on Receptivity and Representation (P. Abela); Perceiving Distinct Particulars (L. Allais); Is Spatial Awareness Required for Object Perception? (J. Campbell); The Normative in Perception (S. Crowell); PART II: SCIENCES. Is There Any Value in Kant’s Account of Mathematics? (G. Bird); Kant Speaks to Stephen Hawking (L. Stevenson); Reading Kant Topographically: From Critical Philosophy to Empirical Geography (J. Malpas & G. Zöller); PART III: LIMITS OF EXPERIENCE. Kant’s Metaphors for Spatial Locations: Understanding Post-Kantian Space (P.S. Anderson); Bird on Kant’s Mathematical Antinomies (A.W. Moore); Space and the Limits of Objectivity: Could There Be a Disembodied Thinking of Reality? (R. Baiasu); PART IV: TIME. Heidegger on Time (M. Inwood); Heidegger’s Interpretation of the Kantian Notion of Time (F.Dastur); Time, Space and Body in Bergson, Heidegger and Husserl (D. Zahavi & S. Overgaard); Index.