What is your answer?

For Kant, "Dogmatism" assumes that one can have knowledge

    { 1 } - through experience of God alone.
    { 2 } - through sense experience alone.
    { 3 } - through concepts and principles without inquiry into how reason obtained them.
    { 4 } - through faith alone without reason.
    { 5 } - through religion alone without inquiring into reason.
    { 6 } - All of the above.

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1 is wrong. Please try again.

For Kant, "Dogmatism" assumes that one can have knowledge

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2 is wrong. Please try again.

For Kant, "Dogmatism" assumes that one can have knowledge

    { 1 } - through experience of God alone.
    { 2 } - through sense experience alone.
    { 3 } - through concepts and principles without inquiry into how reason obtained them.
    { 4 } - through faith alone without reason.
    { 5 } - through religion alone without inquiring into reason.
    { 6 } - All of the above.

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3 is correct!

For Kant, "Dogmatism" assumes that one can have knowledge

    { 1 } - through experience of God alone.
    { 2 } - through sense experience alone.
    { 3 } - through concepts and principles without inquiry into how reason obtained them.
    { 4 } - through faith alone without reason.
    { 5 } - through religion alone without inquiring into reason.
    { 6 } - All of the above.

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4 is wrong. Please try again.

For Kant, "Dogmatism" assumes that one can have knowledge

    { 1 } - through experience of God alone.
    { 2 } - through sense experience alone.
    { 3 } - through concepts and principles without inquiry into how reason obtained them.
    { 4 } - through faith alone without reason.
    { 5 } - through religion alone without inquiring into reason.
    { 6 } - All of the above.

See 213.

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5 is wrong. Please try again.

For Kant, "Dogmatism" assumes that one can have knowledge

    { 1 } - through experience of God alone.
    { 2 } - through sense experience alone.
    { 3 } - through concepts and principles without inquiry into how reason obtained them.
    { 4 } - through faith alone without reason.
    { 5 } - through religion alone without inquiring into reason.
    { 6 } - All of the above.

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6 is wrong. Please try again.

For Kant, "Dogmatism" assumes that one can have knowledge

    { 1 } - through experience of God alone.
    { 2 } - through sense experience alone.
    { 3 } - through concepts and principles without inquiry into how reason obtained them.
    { 4 } - through faith alone without reason.
    { 5 } - through religion alone without inquiring into reason.
    { 6 } - All of the above.

Kant calls only one of the above dogmatism. Some might call the other answers dogmatism, but he does not.

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the end