Page:Kant's Prolegomena etc (1883).djvu/280

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
158
KANT'S METAPHYSICAL FOUNDATIONS OF SCIENCE.

Observation.

For the construction of conceptions, it is requisite that the condition of their presentation should not he borrowed from experience, and thus that they should not presuppose certain forces, the existence of which can only be deduced from experience, or, in short, that the condition of the construction should not be itself a conception incapable of being given a priori in intuition; as for instance, that of cause and effect, action and resistance, &c. It is here especially to be observed that Phoronoiny is throughout, primarily construction of motions in general as quantities, and that, as it has for its subject, matter merely as something movable, and of which no quantity therefore comes into consideration, it has to determine these motions alone as quantities (as concerns their velocity as well as their direction, and indeed their combination) a priori. For thus much must be established entirely a priori and intuitionally, for the sake of applied mathematics. For the rules of the connection of motions through physical causes, that is forces, never admit of being fundamentally expounded before the principles of their composition generally are previously laid down mathematically as a foundation.


Principle 1.

Every motion, as object of a possible experience, may be viewed, at pleasure, as motion of a body in a space that is at rest, or as rest of the body, and motion of the space in the opposite direction with equal velocity.

Observation.

In order to make an experience of the motion of a body it is requisite that not only the body but also the space in which it moves should be objects of external experience, or in other words, material. An absolute motion, therefore, that is, in reference to a non-material space,