Abstract
DR. INGLERY, I should think, is quite entitled to say not only that Kant might, but that he would, have disclaimed the phrase Form of Thought as applied to Space or Time taken simply. The remark of Mr. Lewes, that “intuition without thought is mere sensuous impression,”—or, as it might have been put, that phenomena of sense (constituted such in the forms of Space and Time) must further be thought under Categories of Understanding, before they can be said to be known or to become intellectual experience—cannot be a sufficient reason for making a Form of Thought proper out of a Form of Intuition.
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ROBERTSON, G. Kant's View of Space. Nature 1, 334 (1870). https://doi.org/10.1038/001334b0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/001334b0
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