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(2012) Contemporary kantian metaphysics, Dordrecht, Springer.

Thinking of everything?

Kant speaks to Stephen Hawking

Leslie Stevenson

pp. 128-145

Theoretical physicists have recently described themselves as aspiring to a "theory of everything'. But more than two centuries ago Kant offered in the Dialectic of his Critique of Pure Reason a systematic diagnosis of a certain kind of transcendental illusion about absolute totalities, an illusion to which we are prone whenever we try to think about the world as a whole. I propose to look afresh at Kant's thought and ponder its implications for contemporary cosmological theorizing, and, conversely, to ask whether modern science can throw any light on his dark musings.1

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/9780230358911_7

Full citation:

Stevenson, L. (2012)., Thinking of everything?: Kant speaks to Stephen Hawking, in R. Baiasu, G. Bird & A. W. Moore (eds.), Contemporary kantian metaphysics, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 128-145.

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