• On the value of acting from the motive of duty
    Philosophical Review 90 (3): 359-382. 1981.
    Richard Henson attempts to take the sting out of this view of Kant on moral worth by arguing (i) that attending to the phenomenon of the overdetermination of actions leads one to see that Kant might have had two distinct views of moral worth, only one of which requires the absence of cooperating inclinations, and (ii) that when Kant insists that there is moral worth only when an action is done from the motive of duty alone, he need not also hold that such a state of affairs is morally better, al…Read more
  • Kant's conception of "Hume's problem"
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 21 (2): 175-193. 1983.
  • Embracing Kant's Formalism
    Kantian Review 16 (1): 49-66. 2011.
    In response to critical discussions of my book, Moral Literacy, by Stephen Engstrom, Sally Sedgwick and Andrews Reath, I offer a defence of Kant's formalism that is not only friendly to my claims for the moral theory's sensitivity to a wide range of moral phenomena and practices at the ground level, but also consistent with Kant's high rationalist ambitions
  • The Rational Role of Perceptual Content
    In Matthew Boyle & Evgenia Mylonaki (eds.), Reason in Nature: New Essays on Themes from John McDowell, Harvard University Press. pp. 83-110. 2022.
  • Kant famously claims that pure reason is subject to a transcendental illusion in which the subjective validity and the regulative use of a principle of reason are conflated with its objective validity and constitutive use. His doctrine of transcendental illusion is puzzling for he insists that this illusion is natural as well as necessary. The two dominant interpretation strategies cannot make sense of this puzzle because they turn out to be either too strong or too weak: they either struggle to…Read more
  • The Search for Logically Alien Thought
    Philosophical Topics 20 (1): 115-180. 1992.
  • Problems from Kant
    James Van Cleve
    OUP Usa. 1999.
    James Van Cleve examines the main topics from Kant's Critique of Pure Reason, such as transcendental idealism, necessity and analyticity, space and time, substance and cause, noumena and things-in-themselves, problems of the self, and rational theology. He also discusses the relationship between Kant's thought and that of modern anti-realists, such as Putnam and Dummett. Because Van Cleve focuses upon specific problems rather than upon entire passages or sections of the Critique, he makes Kant's…Read more
  • Kant on Apriority and the Spontaneity of Cognition
    In Samuel Newlands & Larry M. Jorgensen (eds.), Metaphysics and the good: themes from the philosophy of Robert Merrihew Adams, Oxford University Press. pp. 188-251. 2009.
    This chapter takes up a suggestion Robert M. Adams makes in his book on Leibniz, that the original notion apriority continues to enjoy currency in the 17th and 18th centuries. On this notion of apriority, to know something a priori is to know it from its grounds. It suggests, in particular, that Kant works with this now archaic conception of the a priori, and that recognizing this point sheds light on the nature of Kant's project in the _Critique of Pure Reason_.
  • Each of Kant’s three Critiques offers an account of the nature of a mental faculty and arrives at this account by means of a procedure I call ‘faculty analysis’. Faculty analysis is often regarded as among the least defensible aspects of Kant’s position; as a consequence, philosophers seeking to inherit Kantian ideas tend to transpose them into a different methodological context. I argue that this is a mistake: in fact faculty analysis is a live option for philosophical inquiry today. My argumen…Read more
  • The real problem of pure reason
    European Journal of Philosophy 30 (1): 45-63. 2022.
    The problem of Kant's first Critique is the problem of pure reason: how are synthetic judgments possible a priori? Many of his readers have believed that the problem depends upon a delimitation within the class of a priori truths of a class of irreducibly synthetic truths—a delimitation whose possibility is doubtful—because absent this it is not excluded that all a priori truths are analytic. I argue, on the contrary, that the problem depends on nothing more than the human knower's everyday cons…Read more