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Dogmatic (Berkelian) idealism for Kant
{ 1 } - one holds that space is a property of things in themselves
{ 2 } - the existence of external things in space is doubtful and indemonstrable, and that the only certain empirical proposition is 'I am.'
{ 3 } - space, and all its conditional objects, is impossible as real and only imaginary.
{ 4 } - he can assert the empirical reality of both space and things-in-themselves.
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Dogmatic (Berkelian) idealism for Kant
{ 1 } - one holds that space is a property of things in themselves
{ 2 } - the existence of external things in space is doubtful and indemonstrable, and that the only certain empirical proposition is 'I am.'
{ 3 } - space, and all its conditional objects, is impossible as real and only imaginary.
{ 4 } - he can assert the empirical reality of both space and things-in-themselves.
Kant says that dogmatic idealism is unavoidable if <=> one holds that space is a property of things in themselves
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2 is wrong. Please try again.
Dogmatic (Berkelian) idealism for Kant
{ 1 } - one holds that space is a property of things in themselves
{ 2 } - the existence of external things in space is doubtful and indemonstrable, and that the only certain empirical proposition is 'I am.'
{ 3 } - space, and all its conditional objects, is impossible as real and only imaginary.
{ 4 } - he can assert the empirical reality of both space and things-in-themselves.
Problematic (Cartesian) idealism for Kant <=> the existence of external things in space is doubtful and indemonstrable, and that the only certain empirical proposition is 'I am.'
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3 is correct!
Dogmatic (Berkelian) idealism for Kant
{ 1 } - one holds that space is a property of things in themselves
{ 2 } - the existence of external things in space is doubtful and indemonstrable, and that the only certain empirical proposition is 'I am.'
{ 3 } - space, and all its conditional objects, is impossible as real and only imaginary.
{ 4 } - he can assert the empirical reality of both space and things-in-themselves.
Dogmatic (Berkelian) idealism for Kant <=> space, and all its conditional objects, is impossible as real and only imaginary.
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4 is wrong. Please try again.
Dogmatic (Berkelian) idealism for Kant
{ 1 } - one holds that space is a property of things in themselves
{ 2 } - the existence of external things in space is doubtful and indemonstrable, and that the only certain empirical proposition is 'I am.'
{ 3 } - space, and all its conditional objects, is impossible as real and only imaginary.
{ 4 } - he can assert the empirical reality of both space and things-in-themselves.
Since Kant does not hold that space is a property of things in themselves <=> he can assert the empirical reality of both space and things-in-themselves.
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the end