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Transcendental
(redirected from transcendentalize)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Legal 0.01 sec.
transcendental
1. (in the philosophy of Kant)
a. (of a judgment or logical deduction) being both synthetic and a priori
b. of or relating to knowledge of the presuppositions of thought
2. Philosophy beyond our experience of phenomena, although not beyond potential knowledge
3. Theol surpassing the natural plane of reality or knowledge; supernatural or mystical

Transcendental 

(1) In scholasticism, any one of such extremely broad concepts as the single, the true, or the good.

(2) In Kantian philosophy, an a priori form of perception—one of the cognitive forms that organize empirical knowledge. In this sense, the forms of perception, space and time, and categories such as substance and causality are transcendentals. Kant defined as transcendental “all knowledge that has to do not so much with objects as with the form of our apperception of objects, inasmuch as such knowledge must be possible a priori” (Soch., vol. 3, Moscow, 1964, p. 121).

The concept of the transcendental is not used in Marxist philosophy.



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Furthermore, he argues that the tendency of orthodox/conservative scholars to disembody Austen and transcendentalize the moral values and ethical framework that her novels espouse from any contextual contingencies is part of a larger historical (and seemingly Machiavellian) attempt to divorce English literature from politics.
Furthermore, he argues that the tendency of orthodox/conservative scholars to disembody Austen and transcendentalize the moral values and ethical framework that her novels espouse from any contextual contingencies is part of a larger historical (and seemingly Machiavellian) attempt to divorce English literature from politics.
He comes in that summer to transcendentalize his seeing of the mesa; his logos is at one with its development.
 
 
 
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