Kant’s concern in the Critique of Pure Reason is with the ‘conditions of the possibility of experience,’ and in particular to show that these ‘are at the same time the conditions of the possibility of the objects of experience’ (A158/B197). Now on the current proposal, ‘experience’ here is ambiguous, but not in a problematic way. For according to Kant, if a lawful representation of the world or its justification by the totality of human perceptions were not even possible — for instance, because transcendental chaos rather than transcendental affinity obtained, because cinnabar ‘were now red, now black, now light, now heavy’ (A100) — then nor would it be possible to have so much as an empirical representation with objective purport. ‘Nothing is an object for us,’ Kant says, ‘unless it presupposes the sum total of all empirical reality as condition of its possibility’ (A582/B610). And even more to the point a little later:
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