The Philosophy Book

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went on to counter this sceptical
point of view with an argument
that claims to prove the existence
of God, and therefore the reality of
an outside world. However, many
philosophers (including Kant) have
not found Descartes’ proof of God
to be valid in its reasoning.
Berkeley, on the other hand,
argued that knowledge is indeed
possible—but that it comes from
experiences our consciousness
perceives. We have no justification
for believing that these experiences
have any external existence outside
our own minds.

Time and consciousness
Kant wants to demonstrate that
there is an external, material world,
and that its existence cannot be
doubted. His argument begins as
follows: in order for something to
exist, it must be determinable in
time—that is, we must be able to
say when it exists and for how long.
But how does this work in the case
of my own consciousness?
Although consciousness seems
to be constantly changing with a
continuous flow of sensations and
thoughts, we can use the word
“now” to refer to what is currently
happening in our consciousness.
But “now” is not a determinate time
or date. Every time I say “now”,
consciousness is different.
Here lies the problem: what
makes it possible to specify the
“when” of my own existence? We
cannot experience time itself,
directly; rather, we experience time
through things that move, change,
or stay the same. Consider the
hands of a clock, constantly moving
slowly around. The moving hands
are useless for determining time on
their own—they need something
against which they change, such as
the numbers on a clock face. Every
resource I have for measuring my

IN CONTEXT


BRANCH
Metaphysics

APPROACH
Transcendental idealism

BEFORE
1641 René Descartes
publishes his Meditations, in
which he doubts all knowledge
apart from the knowledge of
his own consciousness.

1739 David Hume publishes
his Treatise of Human Nature,
which suggests limitations
on how the human mind
perceives reality.

AFTER
19th century The German
idealist movement develops in
response to Kant’s philosophy.

1900s Edmund Husserl
develops phenomenology, the
study of objects of experience,
using Kant’s understanding
of consciousness.

IMMANUEL KANT


According to Kant, we can only
experience time through things in the
world that move or change, such as
the hands of a clock. So time is only
ever experienced by us indirectly.

constantly changing “now” is found
in material objects outside me in
space (including my own physical
body). Saying that I exist requires
a determinate point in time, and
this, in turn, requires an actually
existing outside world in which
time takes place. My level of
certainty about the existence of the
external world is thus precisely the
same as my level of certainty about
the existence of consciousness,
which Descartes believed was
absolutely certain.

The problem of science
Kant also looked at how science
understood the exterior world. He
admired the awesome progress
that the natural sciences had made
over the previous two centuries,
compared with the relative
stagnation in the subject from
ancient times until that point. Kant,
along with other philosophers,
wondered what was suddenly being
done correctly in scientific research.
The answer given by many thinkers
of the period was empiricism. The
empiricists, such as John Locke
and David Hume, argued that there
is no knowledge except that which

I


mmanuel Kant thought it was
“scandalous” that in more than
2,000 years of philosophical
thought, nobody had been able to
produce an argument to prove that
there really is a world out there,
external to us. He particularly had
in mind the theories of René
Descartes and George Berkeley,
who both entertained doubts about
the existence of an external world.
At the start of his Meditations,
Descartes argued that we must
doubt all knowledge except that
of our own existence as thinking
beings—even the knowledge that
there is an external world. He then

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