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Consciousness and Subject in the Critique of Pure Reason
Petříček, Vojtěch ; Karásek, Jindřich (advisor) ; Hill, James (referee)
Consciousness, the Self and the "I" subject - central themes of transcendental idealism as proposed by Immanuel Kant In his Critique of Pure Reason. This thesis is an attempt at interpretation of the relevant passages of the Critique in order to draw implications for the matter of subjectivity. The chosen interpretation leads towards a minimalist concept of the transcendental self, which is a purely epistemic subject devoid of all empirical and psychological attributes. Consciousness, as the core of the transcendental subject, is viewed here as a non-substantial agent: an activity of being conscious rather than an originator or result of that activity.

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