

 #682 
 Mentioned in 35 episodes 
Critique of pure reason
Book • 1876
Immanuel Kant's "Critique of Pure Reason" is a monumental work in philosophy that revolutionized epistemology and metaphysics.
It explores the limits of human reason and the conditions under which knowledge is possible.
Kant argues that our experience is shaped by inherent structures of the mind, known as categories of understanding.
The book delves into the nature of space, time, and causality, and how these concepts structure our perception of the world.
Its influence on subsequent philosophical thought is immeasurable, shaping debates on knowledge, morality, and the nature of reality.
It explores the limits of human reason and the conditions under which knowledge is possible.
Kant argues that our experience is shaped by inherent structures of the mind, known as categories of understanding.
The book delves into the nature of space, time, and causality, and how these concepts structure our perception of the world.
Its influence on subsequent philosophical thought is immeasurable, shaping debates on knowledge, morality, and the nature of reality.
Mentioned by





























Mentioned in 35 episodes
Mentioned as a reference to Kant's dove, which needs the resistance of the wind to fly.

181 snips
 29: Billy Oppenheimer - Attuned to Clues 
Mentioned by 



Maria Konnikova

166 snips
 #89 Maria Konnikova: Less Certainty, More Inquiry 
Mentioned in the context of discussing Kant's transcendental idealism and its influence on process philosophy.

131 snips
 Matthew Segall: The Cosmos Is Made of Consciousness  
Mentioned by 



Hugh Ross

103 snips
 The Origin of the Universe (Fine Tuning, Physics of Eden, & the Ice Age) w/Hugh Ross & Fuz Rana - 069 
Mentioned by 



Angela Duckworth

93 snips
 215. Is It Okay to Do the Right Thing for the Wrong Reason? 
Mentioned by 



Johnathan Bi

50 snips
 Debate: Can AI Write a Great Book? 
Mentioned by 



Melvyn Bragg

47 snips
 Kant's Copernican Revolution 
Mentioned by 

![undefined]()



Sean M. Carroll

William Egginton

41 snips
 254 | William Egginton on Kant, Heisenberg, and Borges 
Mentioned by 

![undefined]()



David Peña-Guzmán

Ellie Anderson

38 snips
 Intuition 
Mentioned to contrast his idea of autonomy with authenticity, highlighting the differences between universal rationality and individual uniqueness.

36 snips
 Authenticity 
Mentioned by 



Maria Konnikova

34 snips
 424. How to Make Your Own Luck 
Mentioned by 



Marci Shore

30 snips
 Class 3: The Legacy of Romanticism 
Referenced by 



Johannes Niederhauser

24 snips
 Nick Land vs. Aleksandr Dugin Debate | Philosophical Commentary  
Mentioned by Matthew Segall in the context of his philosophical training and the German idealist movement.

23 snips
 Process & Reality: Alfred North Whitehead, Process Philosophy, and Organic Realism 
Mentioned by 



Simon Critchley

16 snips
 Episode 13: Anticipatory Resoluteness 
Mentioned by ![undefined]()


Steven Shaviro

14 snips
 Steven Shaviro /// Process After Hours w/ Kazi Adi Shakti 
Mentioned by 

![undefined]()



Fr. Patrick Briscoe

Fr. Bonaventure Chapman

14 snips
 What Nietzsche Got Right 
Mentioned by ![undefined]()


Matthew Petrusik

13 snips
 WOF 466: Bishop Barron on the Theology of Balthasar (3 of 12) 
Mentioned by ![undefined]()


Andrew Janiak

13 snips
 Andrew Janiak, "The Enlightenment's Most Dangerous Woman: Émilie Du Châtelet and the Making of Modern Philosophy" (Oxford UP, 2024) 
Mentioned by ![undefined]()


Kieran Fox

12 snips
 What Einstein Meant by God: Science, Spirituality, and the Search for Meaning 


