In this book I focus on Hegel’s reading of Kant’s Transcendental Deduction of the Categories in his early account in Faith and Knowledge (1802). Up until now, accounts of this early work of Hegel have mostly dismissed it either as merely a youthful attempt or regarded it as at best an incomplete account of Hegel’s core philosophy (see e.g. Houlgate). Those who do take the work more seriously see it nonetheless as a work that fundamentally breaks with Kant (e.g. Düsing, Sedgwick). I will argue bo…
Read moreIn this book I focus on Hegel’s reading of Kant’s Transcendental Deduction of the Categories in his early account in Faith and Knowledge (1802). Up until now, accounts of this early work of Hegel have mostly dismissed it either as merely a youthful attempt or regarded it as at best an incomplete account of Hegel’s core philosophy (see e.g. Houlgate). Those who do take the work more seriously see it nonetheless as a work that fundamentally breaks with Kant (e.g. Düsing, Sedgwick). I will argue both that (1) Faith and Knowledge, in particular the section on Kant, shows Hegel already at his mature best and that (2) Hegel does not break with Kant, even though it is true that there are clear differences and Hegel pursues his own agenda. While the last chapter of the book outlines the connection between the themes of Faith and Knowledge and later mature work, especially the Science of Logic, the emphasis in the book will squarely lie on (2). More concretely, while it is true that in several respects his treatment is unfair to Kant, I argue that Hegel is an astute reader of Kant’s Deduction, and is able to identify the philosophical core issues in that famous argument.
Through the prism of what I call ‘The Identity Thesis’ I explore three main themes in Hegel’s account, each corresponding to important steps in Kant’s deduction argument: the unifying role of the synthesis of the imagination in cognition (chapter 2), the place of space (chapter 3), and the idea of an intuitive intellect as contrasted with a discursive intellect (chapter 4).
Hegel expresses The Identity Thesis most succinctly in his defence of Kant against Jacobi:
"Kant brilliantly posits the a priori [ground] of sensibility in the original identity of unity and the manifold, which at the level where unity is completely immersed in the manifold, is transcendental imagination; and he posits the intellect in the raising of the a priori synthetic unity of sensibility into universality, so that this identity faces sensibility in a relative antithesis. Reason, in turn, becomes the higher level of the preceding relative antithesis, though only in such a way that this universality and infinity is pure formal infinity, and as such fixated. This is an authentically rational construction in which the misleading ‘faculties’ persist only in name; the truth is that Kant posits all of them in one identity."
Hegel is the first reader of Kant who posits the Identity Thesis. In a nutshell: The Identity Thesis says that the faculty of understanding which unites representations by means of analytic unity on the conceptual level is the same faculty, through the ‘same function’, that unites representations by means of synthetic unity on the level of intuition. This is Kant’s claim in the so-called Leitfaden in the Metaphysical Deduction. This identity claim translates to the main question of the Transcendental Deduction where, in the so-called Second Step, it is argued that the function of synthesis responsible for the unification of intuition is that of the productive imagination and that the synthetic unity of representations is the way given manifolds in sensibility are united for cognition. The object as we conceive of it is the same object as we encounter it in sensibility.
There is controversy in the Kant literature as to whether the identity that is expressed here is a reductive one or not. My claim is that, in Faith and Knowledge, Hegel provides good arguments for seeing the identity between the two functions, of conceiving of representations as unified and of intuiting them as such by means of the imagination, as a reductive one. The real function on the background -- Kant’s ‘same function’ -- that unites all representations, both conceptual and in intuition, is, when read properly, the synthetic unity of imagination, whereby the faculties of sensibility or intuition and understanding ‘persist’ as distinct ‘only in name’. ‘One and the same synthetic unity...is the principle of intuition and of the intellect’, as Hegel says. The faculties are as such derivative of that underlying synthetic unity. They are surface terms for what is in fact one. ‘The truth is that Kant posits all of them in one identity.’
Chapter 3 provides a novel interpretation of Hegel’s reading of Kant on space in Faith and Knowledge. In a notoriously difficult footnote in the B-Deduction Kant makes the confusing claim that the unity in sensibility (which is a synthetic unity) ‘presupposes a synthesis, which does not belong to the senses’ (B160–1n.). This appears to amount to a contradiction, but in a defence of Kant against Jacobi in Faith and Knowledge Hegel says that there is no such contradiction. Hegel talks about ‘Die Potenz des Versenktseins’ of the synthetic unity in the manifold which is compatible with the distinctions between form of intuition and formal intuition, and between sensibility and the understanding. Hegel’s idea of ‘Die Potenz des Versenktseins’ of synthetic unity is indicative of the epistemological primacy of the claims about the synthetic unity of space, which respects the sui generis metaphysical nature of space (and time) but at the same time emphasizes the unity of space simpliciter and the unity between space and the understanding in its function as the synthesis of imagination.
Regarding the topic of the intuitive intellect, discussed in chapter 4 against the backdrop of the existing literature on the intuitive intellect, it is here that Hegel uses his analysis of the original synthetic unity to go beyond Kant’s restrictions with respect to intuitive intellects in §§16, 17, 21 of the B-Deduction, but only in a qualified sense (namely insofar as Kant’s idealism about objects is concerned). Taking a cue from a discussion in Kant’s Critique of Judgement, Hegel argues that the intuitive intellect is in fact nothing but the transcendental imagination and its unity is nothing but the unity of the understanding. We should read this in the context of the analysis of the Identity Thesis. Hegel is not claiming some kind of cosmic or pre-discursive mind that produces objects out of itself and is in no need of sensibility. Hegel’s appeal to the intuitive intellect must primarily be seen in relation to his critique of Kant’s idealism, namely, that the identity of thought and object is just an identity for us, not between thinking and being itself, as it is on Hegel’s reading. Hegel thus disentangles the epistemic core of Kant’s insights from what he considers the metaphysical dead weight of subjective idealism.