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Examples

  • It will be found most convenient to divide the study of Kant's critical philosophy into three portions, corresponding to the doctrines contained in his three "Critiques".

    The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 8: Infamy-Lapparent 1840-1916 1913

  • I am writing to my publishers to send you "Lay Sermons", "Critiques",

    Life and Letters of Thomas Henry Huxley — Volume 3 Leonard Huxley 1896

  • Behind this thinking lies the modern self-limitation of reason, classically expressed in Kant’s "Critiques", but in the meantime further radicalized by the impact of the natural sciences.

    The Best of Greek Thought Is “An Integral Part of Christian Faith” Argent 2006

  • But throughout the Critique of Aesthetic Judgement, one gets a definite sense that Kant's heart really isn't in this one to the extent it was in the first two Critiques.

    Archive 2009-09-01 Matthew Guerrieri 2009

  • But throughout the Critique of Aesthetic Judgement, one gets a definite sense that Kant's heart really isn't in this one to the extent it was in the first two Critiques.

    Logical conclusions Matthew Guerrieri 2009

  • And how thin and unlaced the forms of Finnegans Wake are beside any of the Critiques, how sunlit Joyce's darkness, how few his parallels, how loose his correspondences.

    Principles of Literary Criticism 2010

  • If Kant's purpose in the Critiques was to uphold Enlightenment rationality, then it's hard not to think that he might have been better off quitting after the first two.

    Logical conclusions Matthew Guerrieri 2009

  • Kant's motive in the third Critique is not to bridge gaps and achieve unity; the distinctions insisted on in the first two Critiques are a priori and necessary, not to be overridden.

    Logical conclusions Matthew Guerrieri 2009

  • The main source of it is the Critique of Judgement, the third section of Kant's massive critical project (the first two parts being the more well-known Critiques of pure reason and practical reason, that is, ethics).

    Archive 2009-09-01 Matthew Guerrieri 2009

  • If Kant's purpose in the Critiques was to uphold Enlightenment rationality, then it's hard not to think that he might have been better off quitting after the first two.

    Archive 2009-09-01 Matthew Guerrieri 2009

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