Critique of Pure Reason
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Critique of Pure Reason

by Kant, Immanuel

Publisher
Independently published
Pages
361
Language
English
Published
1942

Overview

Immanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason is one of philosophy's most important and demanding books, examining what the human mind can know and where its limits begin. Kant asks how experience is possible, how concepts shape perception, and why metaphysical claims become unstable when they move beyond possible experience.

This is essential reading for students of philosophy, but it also rewards general readers who want to understand the foundations of modern thought. The Critique of Pure Reason is not light reading, yet it remains influential because it reorganizes the problem of knowledge with extraordinary ambition. It is a landmark text for anyone interested in reason, experience, and the architecture of understanding. It remains a lasting guide for readers confronting the limits of reason and the reach of experience.

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