Lee Braver

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Lee Braver



Lee Braver is Professor of Philosophy at the University of South Florida and the author of Groundless Grounds: A Study of Wittgenstein and Heidegger (MIT Press) and A Thing of This World: A History of Continental Anti-Realism.

Average rating: 4.38 · 183 ratings · 27 reviews · 11 distinct worksSimilar authors
A Thing of This World: A Hi...

4.57 avg rating — 61 ratings — published 2007 — 7 editions
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Groundless Grounds: A Study...

4.23 avg rating — 61 ratings — published 2012 — 12 editions
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Heidegger: Thinking of Being

4.46 avg rating — 37 ratings — published 2014 — 10 editions
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Heidegger's Later Writings:...

4.20 avg rating — 15 ratings — published 2009 — 7 editions
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Division III of Heidegger's...

3.80 avg rating — 5 ratings — published 2015 — 6 editions
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Heidegger on Thinking

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A Thing of This World: A Hi...

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Introducing Ethics: A Begin...

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Introducing Ethics: A Begin...

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(A Thing of This World: A H...

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“The Kantian Paradigm embraces what I am calling the Empirical Directive by changing the conception of the self from a substance like Descartes’ thinking thing to a functional experience-organizing energeia which can only be studied by the way it organizes experience.”
Lee Braver, A Thing of This World: A History of Continental Anti-Realism

“Although he initiates anti-realism, Kant retains two key elements of realism in his system. First, in order to secure the stability—that is, necessity and universality—of the knowledge organized by the subject, he has to make the experience-organizing faculties of the subject permanent and unchanging. Although it is no substantial object like Descartes’ thinking thing, this view still amounts to a vestigial realism of the subject. Second, in order to escape what he considers to be the incoherence of complete idealism, he posits mind-independent reality in noumena.”
Lee Braver, A Thing of This World: A History of Continental Anti-Realism

“Starting from Descartes’ commitment to a few absolutely certain innate ideas and reason’s ability to determine some facts about reality a priori, Leibniz ended up making all ideas innate and deducing how God must have set up the universe. On the other side, Hume continued Locke’s emptying out of the mind until there was no longer a there there, that is, not even a substantial mind to be emptied. Far from being rationally justifiable, Hume demonstrated that most of our beliefs are determined by an arational reflex, a process that has roughly the epistemological status of digestion. Perhaps Kant’s greatest accomplishment was reconciling these deeply heterogeneous schools, weaving a seamless system out of ideas taken from both sides. The linchpin of this synthesis was what he called his Copernican Revolution: the epoch-making claim that the mind actively processes or organizes experience in constructing knowledge, rather than passively reflecting an independent reality. To speak metaphorically, the mind is more like a factory than a mirror or soft wax. It is this idea that enabled Kant to incorporate the empiricist dependence on experience into the rationalist ideal of universal and necessary knowledge.”
Lee Braver, A Thing of This World: A History of Continental Anti-Realism

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