The Open Court 38, No.813

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And when an attractive crumb is presented, it is most natural to taste.
In diagnosing this confusion into which human reason falls, even as Mr. Wiggam has pointed out, Kant found it guilty of employing "principles which transcend the region of experience." To pre- scribe a treatment of the malady, naturally we must probe to find out the nature of these experience-transcending principles ; and a journey into Kant's Critique is the first indication. Without attempt- ing here to tread that labyrin
...thian maze, we will content ourselves with a few bold flank attacks, and, daringly plunging into the vitals of the Critique, snatch up what appear to be the most promising jewels, and forthwith retreat. What have we? It is this: that every- thing we know is known only as existing in time and space and as having quantity attributes, quality, a relationship to something else, and as having a necessary and certain existence. Another startling disclosure of Kant's is this : that the contradictory ideas that the total of things had a beginning in time and is also limited in space, and that the total of things had no beginning in time and has no THE ENIGMA OF SCIENCE 111 limits in space, are both tenable ; that the contradictory ideas that everything consists of simple parts and that there is nothing that is not composed of parts, and that nothing consists of simple parts and that there is no simple substance, are likewise both tenable ; that the contradictory ideas that a causality of freedom is necessary to account for phenomena, and that there is no such thing as absolute freedom, are also both tenable ; and finally, that the contradictory ideas that there is an absolutely necessary being as the cause of all things, and no absolutely necessary being exists as the cause of all things, are similarly both tenable.

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