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An intuition is a conscious objective direct representation of an object, according to A320/B376-77. It is direct in being non-conceptual, involving no mediating representation, and it is what distinguish it from a conceptual representation. Now someone not familiar with Kant might think that these are our perceptual representations. But central to Kant's philosophy the claim that the use of (pure) concepts is necessary for the cognition/knowledge of objects. Our experiences of everyday objects for example already involve the subsumption under concepts. The problem is that he also holds that:

Objects can indeed appear to us without necessarily having to be related to functions of the understanding. (A89/B122)

How can intuitions be conscious and objective if they do not involve concepts? Maybe they are some kind of representations of objects which are not a cognitions/knowledge. But if our perceptions are cognitions/knowledge, what would be a concrete example of this kind of representations? Giving examples of a priori syntheses, Kant speaks of representations of parts of a house, or visual perception of a stone and a feeling of weight. But these according to his own standards are conceptual representations. It is seems that we can analyse our representation as far as we want without ever encountering some purely non-conceptual representation.

Maybe we could say that it is possible to extract a more coherent theory from Kant's texts by ignoring passages similar to the one above and focusing on his claim that intuition and concept are both necessary for knowledge of objects (for example in A50–51/B74–75). Under such a light, an intuition is more like a kind of uncounscious sensory input which is constitutive of experience but which we never encounter alone. But besides its being explicitly in opposition to the text, it makes the whole notion theoretically not clear enough. It seems also that Kant would have to do more work to clarify their explanatory role to justify their existence and all what he says concerning them (that they undergo a number of syntheses etc), which, if they are unconscious, seems hard using a philosophical introspective method.

Ouazzani
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    Possible duplicate (no offence here, search seems to be broken): [What is "intuition" for Kant?](https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/questions/41579/what-is-intuition-for-kant) – Philip Klöcking Sep 04 '17 at 18:02
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    My professor (having had worked on Kant for quite a while) used to put it that way: Although there are (ALWAYS) textbits that suggest otherwise, one will be safe in generally thinking of intuitions as already sorted by productive imagination through categories and schematism. I think this is the main problem here: He states (quite often) things that have to be relativised after the deduction. One of these is the *actual* division between intuition and concept imho. – Philip Klöcking Sep 04 '17 at 18:15
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    Second thought to ponder: Kant (not completely coherently, again) distinguishes between object as such, possible object of thought and possible object of experience. It is often worth a try to sort which one is actually meant when. – Philip Klöcking Sep 04 '17 at 18:17
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    @Philip Klöcking. Thanks for your answer. Your second comment is I think the alternative I was adressing in my last paragraph. It seems that even given that, there is little we could positvely say about intuitions, and how we could then be justified in introducing them in a theory of cognition. This is what you expressed in your comment to Conifold's answer too. So I suppose Kant is the one to blame. But since the Critique is considered to be one of the greatest philosophy classics, it is sad to find out that even one of its basic and simple concepts is rather obscure and contradictory. – Ouazzani Sep 04 '17 at 18:41
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    One trait of "the greatest philosophy classics" is that their concepts are *never* "simple" on a second look - that is why they *are* classics and still worth consideration imho. I think the definition of Duns Scotus provided by Conifold works quite well if we do not put too much ontological and epistemological commitment into it: Something somehow caused by outer world, mediated by senses *and* understanding (without the latter, we couldn't grasp it as *something*), and presenting itself as (only) object of experience. Mind particular intuition *of something* vs. (manifold of) intuition. – Philip Klöcking Sep 04 '17 at 19:53
  • Maybe we can interpret "objects appearing to us" in the quotation as not meant as being understood through the categories, but only as impressing our senses which could be unconscious in which case they won't be "related to functions of the understanding." This would be consistent with what Kant wrote in your first citation. There he explicitly introduces representation as a general genus under which stands conscious representation. He doesn't explicitly name *un*conscious representation but articulating it as a second kind would be quite consistent with his other definitions. – infatuated Sep 05 '17 at 06:29
  • @infatuated No, if you read A320/B376-77, he does talk about representation with consciousness, but he also explicitly subsume intuition under it. – Ouazzani Sep 05 '17 at 08:49
  • I see but in the quote you've supplied there's no talk of "intuition". It might be in the context but I haven't checked. – infatuated Sep 05 '17 at 09:17
  • The definition you use states "An intuition is a "conscious objective direct representation of an object". I would strongly disagree with this definition, which appears quite daft from here, so find the question difficult. –  Sep 05 '17 at 11:54
  • "What determines whether experience can suitably be brought under any putative concept? No such principles are provided by experience itself." (Metaphysics, D.W. Hamlyn, Cambridge Univ. Press 1984, p.24). Discussing Hegel's criticism of Kant. This boils down to the problem of the one and the many. – Gordon Oct 11 '17 at 15:46
  • "Sorted by productive imagination...", as suggested by Philip's professor, sounds to me like a mystification. Of course the professor is dealing with a difficult problem left to us by Kant, it's no fault of the professor's. – Gordon Oct 11 '17 at 16:00
  • What could this pre-sorting (productive imagination) of appearances be? It seems to be making judgments, it has some sort of categories in order to sort. Could it be public language a la Wittgenstein (Philosophical Investigations)? If language does this, why do we need Kant? Anyway I don't know enough Wittgenstein to answer this question. You might want to look at Hamlyn, and this also regarding Hegel's attempt to solve this problem: https://www.google.com/amp/s/bat020.com/2011/05/20/force-and-understanding-in-hegels-phenomenology-of-spirit/amp/ I would read both, the Hamlyn first. – Gordon Oct 11 '17 at 16:40

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Kantian intuitions, as I understand them, are basically just changing kaleidoscopic images. That is, heaps of sensible qualities, like colors, stretched over space and time.

a kaleidoscopic image
(source: netdna-ssl.com)
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To say that Kantian intuitions are "non conceptual" seems to me ambiguous. The Kantian intuitions do not involve "the concepts of the Understanding", especially the concepts of enduring substances and of causes and effects. But Kantian intuitions can and do involve other kinds of concepts: concepts of space and time, which Kant identified with mathematical concepts (arithmetical and geometrical); qualitative concepts: colors, sounds, smells etc; concepts of strength and intensity.

Kantian intuitions are conscious, at least in potential. Nothing is hidden in them. As to being "objective", this is again ambiguous. Anything that can be thought about Kant calls an "object", including subjective phenomena and unknowable things. The word "objective" he usually reserves for the sensible (material) world, and for the possibility of knowing it. So intuitions can represent objects without being objective; as they do in dreams.

It is instructive, in the present regard, to compare the Kantian intuitions, that is sense experience, to that of the classical empiricists (Locke, Berkeley, Hume). The empiricists conceived of sense experience as consisting of bundles of sensible qualities, such as colors and shapes. All our concepts were, according to the empiricists, subsequently derived from the encounters with these bundles. Kant added over these encounters with bundles of qualities that (1) time and space are not derived from sense experience, but are its apriori forms; and that (2) the concepts of the Understanding, concepts of enduring substances, and of causes and effects, also have an apriori basis, and so are not derived from sense experience. There could be an experience of objects which does not abide by the concepts and rules of the Understanding (in this sense, the Understanding is not like space and time). But there could not be an objective experience, i.e. an experience that can lead to knowledge of an objective world, which does not abide by the concepts and rules of the Understanding. And this makes those concepts apriori valid.

Glorfindel
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Ram Tobolski
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    I think a) that the main drive of your argument is only applicable to *the manifold of intuition(s)* and that b) space and time as *pure forms of intuition* are definitely involved, as *concepts* not so much imho. There is a clear distinction to be made between those two meanings of space and time (just as of the categories, tbf). Regarding intuition, he distinguishes at least the manifold of pure intuition (of which space and time are the form) and intuitions *of something particular*. There is some less abstract manifold somewhere in between there, but that's hard to pin down. – Philip Klöcking Sep 10 '17 at 23:43
  • Thank you Tobolski for your answer. But imho it seems that your interpretation doesn't match Kant's meaning, and isn't really philosophically tenable either. First, as Klocking already said, the forms of intuiton space and time are not, for Kant, the concepts of space and time. It is almost part of the definition of intuition, immediate representation of objetcs, that it does not involve concepts. And when Kant characterizes intuition, he systematically distinguishes it from conceptual representations (e.g. A19/B33, A68/B93). – Ouazzani Sep 15 '17 at 21:56
  • Second, I do agree that 'objective' is ambiguous, but it seems that Kant when talking about the necessary use of the categories for objective representations really means it only as 'representing an object'. Your interpretation is founded on the very problematic notion of an objective sensible world in Kant's philosophy (it is problematic in the kind of objectivity it is supposed to involve since it is still a world of appearances). – Ouazzani Sep 15 '17 at 21:57
  • But whatever we may interpret it to be, if Kant really does admit of such a world, I agree that in this case he thinks the categories to be necessary for knowing it. But this doesn't mean that the categories determine only representations of the objective world. This can be seen for example in the fact that Kant thinks he derives the necessity of 'a priori synthesis according to concepts' from the mere unity of apperception, which condition even representations of dreams (I remember) satisfy. Third, even if we put aside questions of interpretation, it seems to me that there are problems here: – Ouazzani Sep 15 '17 at 21:58
  • '..intuitions can represent objects without being objective; as they do in dreams' OK. But then in this case, in dreams we only encounter them as 'heaps of sensible qualities, like colors, stretched over space and time'. But this is clearly not an adequate descritpion of dreams, for I can see trees and tables, etc. The lack of meaningful connection between representations in dreams, if they are any, is not one between a manifold of intuition, but between representations which are already product of a priori synthesis. – Ouazzani Sep 15 '17 at 21:58
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    @Ouazzani You're welcome. And (1) if intuition/sensibility does not include the _concepts_ of space and time, then where would you locate these concepts, on Kant's map of faculties? They belong neither in the Understanding, nor in Reason. There just does not seem to be another place _for Kant_ to locate the concepts of space and time than in intuition/sensibility. – Ram Tobolski Sep 15 '17 at 22:29
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    And (2) as for seeing trees and chairs in dreams, yes, these were the _objects_ that I had in mind. In a mere "heap of sensible qualities" you don't get even objects, unless you somehow isolate one heap from the others. Anyway, I didn't mean to provide a thorough account of dreams. They just seem to fall short of Kant's full demands for ascribing _objectivity_. – Ram Tobolski Sep 15 '17 at 22:35