Enlightenment & 1800s · 1724–1804
Kant
“Do our minds shape what we see?”
Immanuel Kant settled the huge fight between rationalists (who trusted reason) and empiricists (who trusted the senses) by saying: both are right, and both are needed. Our senses give us raw data, but our mind actively shapes it — like wearing built-in ‘glasses’ of time and space. We never see reality totally ‘as it is,’ only as our minds organize it.
“Two things fill the mind with ever new and increasing wonder — the starry heavens above me and the moral law within me.”
The big idea
Kant argued the mind isn't a passive blank slate; it actively structures experience using built-in categories like time, space, and cause. So knowledge needs BOTH experience AND the mind's framework. In ethics he gave the ‘categorical imperative’: only act in a way you'd be willing to make a universal rule for everyone.
What they changed
He's one of the most influential philosophers ever, reshaping how we think about knowledge, science, ethics, and the limits of reason. His idea that every human has inherent dignity and should never be used merely as a means underlies modern human-rights thinking.
The controversy
If we can only know how things appear to us (not the ‘thing-in-itself’), are we forever cut off from true reality? And critics argue his strict rule-based ethics can be too rigid — Kant said lying is always wrong, even to a murderer.
In their words
- “Act only according to that rule which you could will to become a universal law.” — Immanuel Kant
- “Science is organized knowledge. Wisdom is organized life.” — Immanuel Kant
✦ A curious detail
Kant was so punctual on his daily walk that neighbors reportedly set their clocks by him.
Read further
Portrait: Painted portrait of Immanuel Kant. Public domain · via Wikimedia Commons.
Meet Kant on the voyage
A curated lecture, a short enquiry, and a wax-seal medallion to acquire — and the next thinker unlocks. No account, no password.
Begin the voyage