German Idealism (11)# Thoughts - 思考者
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German Idealism (11)
Herbart. Herbart stuck even more closely to the Kantian view-point, but,
like other followers of Kant, he sought to eliminate the conception of an
unknowable reality, and press forward to the ultimate nature of things. He
adopted Kant's analysis of consciousness, but in a psychological sense,
and found that the transcendental reality consists of a plurality of simple
substances. These he called "reals." They are psychical in nature and
analogous to the monads of Leibniz. Thr
Herbart. Herbart stuck even more closely to the Kantian view-point, but,
like other followers of Kant, he sought to eliminate the conception of an
unknowable reality, and press forward to the ultimate nature of things. He
adopted Kant's analysis of consciousness, but in a psychological sense,
and found that the transcendental reality consists of a plurality of simple
substances. These he called "reals." They are psychical in nature and
analogous to the monads of Leibniz. Thr