When I was an undergraduate at Harvard, in the first years
of the 1950’s, Clarence Irving Lewis was the grand old man of the Philosophy
Department. In my senior year, 1952-53, the
year Lewis retired, he taught three courses, including the legendary course on
the First Critique, and I took all
three. I thought then, and have thought
ever since, that Lewis was the greatest philosopher I ever studied with,
greater than Willard Van Orman Quine, greater than Nelson Goodman. Lewis’ Big Book was Analysis of Knowledge and Valuation, published in 1946, and needless to say, I read it cover to cover,
but it was Lewis’s Kant course that started me on the path that leads now to my
videotaped lectures on the Critique of
Pure Reason.
This morning, while taking my morning walk, I began to run
over in my mind the lecture I shall be delivering and recording tomorrow. I have reached the deepest and most difficult
section of the Critique, the
Deduction of the Pure Concepts of Understanding in the First Edition. My copy of the Critique is littered with snippets of orange-colored post-its
marking the passages I intend to read out and explicate. I brooded for a while on my walk about one of
the most complex elements of Kant’s theory, puzzling over how best to explain
it. And then I suddenly realized that
the very best way to make sense of it was by invoking Lewis’ theory of “non-terminating
judgments.”
“My God,” I said to myself, “the old boy really knew what he
was doing!”
It has only taken me sixty-three years to figure out the
connection between Lewis’ life-long study of Kant and his own epistemological
theory. Better late than never, I suppose. I would like to think he would be pleased
that I finally get it.
It's an art. Titian, is reported to have said on his deathbed: "Ah - to live another 99 years,
ReplyDeleteI'm just beginning to get the idea."
Free pdf of Analysis of Knowledge and Valuation:
ReplyDeletehttps://archive.org/details/analysisofknowle032180mbp