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Radical Immanence of Thought and the Genesis of Consciousness: Salomon Maïmon

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

Salomon Maïmon argues that the formal determination of experience in Kant’s first Kritik insufficiently answers the question ‘quid juris?’. As an alternative to Kant’s theory, he develops a genetic transcendentalism in which experience is completely determined a priori. Discussing this genetic approach, I focus on how the spatiotemporal determinations of conscious experience are traced back to pure ideal relations. Relying on Leibniz and his theory of space and time, I explain how the extensive magnitudes of consciousness are founded in intensive magnitudes of what Maïmon calls ‘pure thought’. As the latter is the transcendental ground for both sensibility and the understanding, Maïmon’s theory contains a radical form of immanence, much like the philosophy of Spinoza and Gilles Deleuze.
Journal: Kant-Studien
ISSN: 0022-8877
Issue: 2
Volume: 110
Pages: 272 - 289
Publication year:2019
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CSS-citation score:1
Authors from:Higher Education
Accessibility:Open