Thought experiments play an important role in philosophy and philosophical theorizing. In this book Eleanor Helms examines thought experiments and charts their use in the work of Danish thinkers Hans Christian Orsted (1777–1851) and Soren Kierkegaard (1813–55), arguing that both were influenced by Kant. She demonstrates how key Kantian concepts shape the methods of both thinkers, especially Kant's claim that regulative ideas like the self, God, and nature cannot be directly represented. Kant proposed some ways in which we can make sense of, or 'cognize,' these kinds of abstract ideas, and Ørsted and Kierkegaard take up the practical challenge of realizing Kant's optimism by designing thought experiments to make these big ideas meaningfully accessible to individual thinkers. Helms's book is the first comprehensive study of Kierkegaard's use of thought experiments as a method, and reveals its significance for our contemporary understanding of how thought experiments work.
Introduction; Part I. The Origins of 'Thought Experiment' in Kant and Ørsted: 1. Thought experiments as tools of cognition; 2. How thought experiments work; 3. Ørsted, mach, and the history of thought experiment; 4. Empiricism and kantian accounts of thought experiment; 5. Rationalism and the question of intellectual intuition; Part II. A Kantian Account of Thought Experiment: 6. Varieties of cognition; 7. An Apparatus for cognition; 8. Cognizing regulative ideas; 9. Bizarre cases and context: two problems for thought experiments; Part III. Kierkegaard and the Concept of Thought Experiment: 10. Kierkegaard and the concept of thought experiment; 11. Controlled experiments; 12. Repetition as thought experiment: a method of variation; 13. Kantian strains in stages on life's way; 14. Cognition as synthesis; Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.
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