TY - JOUR AU - Dietzsch, Steffen PY - 2020/04/09 Y2 - 2024/03/29 TI - Kants kognitive Konstruktivität in der Erkenntnis und als Grenze des Rechts JF - Studia z Historii Filozofii JA - SZHF VL - 11 IS - 2 SE - ROZPRAWY DO - 10.12775/szhf.2020.013 UR - https://apcz.umk.pl/szhf/article/view/szhf.2020.013 SP - 69-87 AB - <p>Kant used Copernicus’ upheaval in thinking on astronomy to illustrate the profoundness of his critique of traditional metaphysics as ‘system of pure reason’. The consequence for philosophy is the following: the perspective of an eternally valid <em>pure reason </em>as a means of gaining knowledge of the world is abandoned – because this approach results not in knowledge, but only in dogmas. Instead, we engage with Kant in a change of perspective. It is grasped how the <em>operative subject </em>manages perception in a changing, agitated world. Instead of understanding perception merely as a mirroring, mimetic achievement, Kant moves to understanding perception as poiesis, as construction, as <em>experimental philosophy</em>. That means: to qualify as perception, something has to be shown to be <em>contrivable</em>, to be <em>construable</em>. This <em>constructiveness of the active subject </em>does not only shape processes of knowledge and perception, but also changes our environment through revolutionary processes in politics and society. Reason in revolutions becomes evident in constituting the legal practice of civil and human rights (<em>Bill of Rights </em>und <em>Code civil</em>).</p> ER -