Kant’s Revolution in Human Thought
Kant revolutionised philosophy by arguing that the human mind actively structures our experience of reality.
Space, time, and causation are built-in mental frameworks that make knowledge possible.
But although these frameworks make knowledge possible, they place strict limits on what we can know.
In 1781, after a decade of introspection, Immanuel Kant published a book so difficult that even leading philosophers struggled to finish it. Kant’s friend and rival Moses Mendelssohn described the Critique of Pure Reason as a “nerve-juice consuming book.” Yet, buried within its more than 800 pages is one of the most influential ideas in the history of thought—an idea that Kant himself compared to the revolution begun by Copernicus in astronomy.
Previously, everyone believed that the Sun revolved around the Earth. Copernicus (1473-1543) turned the tables by asking how it would be if, instead, the Earth revolved around the Sun. Kant believed that human thought itself required a similar reinvention. It had always been assumed that human knowledge must conform to the world, that the human mind was just a passive observer. But what if it was the other way round? What if it was the world that needed to conform to the structures of the human mind?
Why Kant’s Revolution Was Needed
Since Descartes (1596-1650), a debate had been dominating philosophy. On one side stood the rationalists such as Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz, who believed that the senses were deceptive and that reason was the only secure source of knowledge. On the other side stood the empiricists, especially Locke and Hume, who argued that the mind starts as a blank slate and that all knowledge is founded in sense experience.
Hume (1711-1776) pushed the empiricist position to its logical conclusion, which is that there are only two kinds of human knowledge: “matters of fact”, which are founded in observation, and “relations of ideas,” such as logic and mathematics, which are true by definition. Anything that is neither, including God, the soul, and free will, belongs to the realm of illusion and speculation.
This scepticism........
