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This article advocates a new interpretation of inner experience – the experience that one has of one’s empirical-psychological features ‘from within’ – in Kant. It argues that for Kant inner experience is the empirical cognition of mental states, but not that of a persistent mental substance. The schema of persistence is thereby substituted with the regulative idea of the soul. This view is shown to be superior to two opposed interpretations: the parity view that regards inner experience as empirical cognition of a mental object on a par with outer experience and the disparity view that denies altogether that inner experience is empirical cognition.
Interpreters of Kant’s Refutation of Idealism face a dilemma: it seems to either beg the question against the Cartesian sceptic or else offer a disappointingly Berkeleyan conclusion. In this article I offer an interpretation of the Refutation on which it does not beg the question against the Cartesian sceptic. After defending a principle about question-begging, I identify four premises concerning our representations that there are textual reasons to think Kant might be implicitly assuming. Using those assumptions, I offer a reconstruction of Kant’s Refutation that avoids the interpretative dilemma, though difficult questions about the argument remain.
In the third Meditation, Descartes sketches a pre-critical conception of sensory cognition, that is, the conception of the senses that he takes the meditator to have entered the Meditations with. In the Sixth Meditation he presents his own theory of the senses. The thought that sensory ideas resemble things located outside of the author falls out of an Aristotelian picture of cognition. Descartes presents the belief in resemblance as a naïve commitment rather than a technical philosophical one, so it is worth doing what we can to make it recognizable and familiar. In his "Refutation of Idealism", Kant classifies Descartes as an idealist and explains idealism as the position "that the only immediate experience is inner experience, and that from it we can only infer outer things". Purposes of gauging Descartes' attitude toward the Aristotelian conception, it would appear that his remarks about resemblance take on special significance.
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