ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1985. This book is about a single famous line of argument, pioneered by Descartes and deployed to full effect by Kant. That argument was meant to refute scepticism once and for all, and make the world safe for science. 'I think, so I exist’ is valid reasoning, but circular as proof. In similar vein, Kant argues from our having a science of geometry to Space being our contribution to experience: a different conclusion, arrived at by a similar fallacy. Yet these arguments do show something: that certain sets of opinions, if professed, show an inbuilt inconsistency. It is this second-strike capacity that has kept transcendental arguments going for so long. 

Attempts to re-build metaphysics by means of such transcendental reasoning have been debated. This book offers an introduction to the field, and ventures its own assessment, in non-technical language, without assuming previous training in logic or philosophy.

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter One|13 pages

Is Scepticism Sensible?

chapter Two|11 pages

The Cogito

chapter Three|11 pages

What the Cogito Refutes

chapter Four|12 pages

Presupposition and Backward Argument

chapter Five|20 pages

Kant’s Vindication of Geometry

chapter Six|14 pages

Our World

chapter Seven|22 pages

How Presupposition Works

chapter Eight|11 pages

Backward Moves in Current Debate

chapter Nine|20 pages

Metaphysical Research

chapter Ten|21 pages

Arguing Transcendentally

chapter Eleven|22 pages

Changing Spectacles

chapter |27 pages

Bibliography