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Examples

  • Hegel's great idea, which Proudhon appropriated, and which he demonstrates with wonderful ability in the "System of Economical Contradictions," is as follows: Antinomy, that is, the existence of two laws or tendencies which are opposed to each other, is possible, not only with two different things, but with one and the same thing.

    What is Property? An Inquiry into the Principle of Right and of Government. 1890

  • The Antinomy is a combination of arguments by which contradictory attributes are proved to be predicable of the same subject.

    Logic Deductive and Inductive Carveth Read 1889

  • Contradictions, "is as follows: Antinomy, that is, the existence of two laws or tendencies which are opposed to each other, is possible, not only with two different things, but with one and the same thing.

    What is Property? 1837

  • Foucault; Chander, working the other way around, from philosophy to reflection on the philosophical antecedents and implications of Bourdieu's sociology, reads the legacy of Kant's Antinomy of Taste within

    Rei Terada 2008

  • What is significant about the Antinomy of Taste in the context of the present discussion is that, in the course of introducing what could not be theorized from

    Contention and Contestation: Aesthetic Culture in Kant and Bourdieu 2008

  • Michael: Our oceans contain concentrations of Aluminum, Antinomy, Barium, ...

    You said it | RELIGION Blog | dallasnews.com 2009

  • "Hume, Kant, and the ˜Antinomy of Taste™," Journal of the History of Philosophy, 41:

    Hume's Aesthetics Gracyk, Ted 2008

  • The Third Antinomy concerns freedom and natural necessity.

    Kant and Hume on Morality Denis, Lara 2008

  • In the Antinomies, the discussion of the Second Antinomy contains some interesting remarks about the simplicity of the soul and there is a discussion of free will in the Solution to the Third Antinomy.

    Kant's View of the Mind and Consciousness of Self Brook, Andrew 2008

  • It is true that part of Kant's rationale for his change of position on this point stems from the “critical turn” undertaken in the Critique of Pure Reason (and in its Second Antinomy in particular).

    Kant's Philosophy of Science Watkins, Eric 2007

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