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Publication Date:
May 2008
ISSN:
1613-1134
DOI:
10.1515/KANT.2008.006

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European Science Foundation ranking A

Kant-Studien

Philosophische Zeitschrift der Kant-Gesellschaft

Ed. by Baum, Manfred / Dörflinger, Bernd / Klemme, Heiner F.

4 Issues per year

VolumeIssuePage

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Kant and non-Euclidean Geometry

Amit Hagar

1Indiana University, Bloomington

Citation Information: Kant-Studien. Volume 99, Issue 1, Pages 80–98, ISSN (Online) 1613-1134, ISSN (Print) 0022-8877, DOI: 10.1515/KANT.2008.006, May 2008

Publication History:
Published Online:
2008-05-13

Introduction

It is occasionally claimed that the important work of philosophers, physicists, and mathematicians in the nineteenth and in the early twentieth centuries made Kant's critical philosophy of geometry look somewhat unattractive. Indeed, from the wider perspective of the discovery of non-Euclidean geometries, the replacement of Newtonian physics with Einstein's theories of relativity, and the rise of quantificational logic, Kant's philosophy seems “quaint at best and silly at worst”. While there is no doubt that Kant's transcendental project involves his own conceptions of Newtonian physics, Euclidean geometry and Aristotelian logic, the issue at stake is whether the replacement of these conceptions collapses Kant's philosophy into an unfortunate embarrassment. Thus, in evaluating the debate over the contemporary relevance of Kant's philosophical project one is faced with the following two questions: (1) Are there any contradictions between the scientific developments of our era and Kant's philosophy? (2) What is left from the Kantian legacy in light of our modern conceptions of logic, geometry and physics? Within this broad context, this paper aims to evaluate the Kantian project vis à vis the discovery and application of non-Euclidean geometries.

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