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In its dealings with the external world the human 'mind' (Gemüt) relates to something different from itself.1 Kant calls 'affection' (Affection) the relationship the mind de facto has with things different from itself insofar as it is mere receptivity; i.e., the mind has the capacity to be affected by things that come from outside itself and that are not of its own generation. To the faculty that accounts for this 'receptivity' (Empfänglichkeit), or capacity of being affected by objects from outside us, Kant gives the name of 'sensibility' (Sinnlichkeit): "The capacity (receptivity) to acquire…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In its dealings with the external world the human 'mind' (Gemüt) relates to something different from itself.1 Kant calls 'affection' (Affection) the relationship the mind de facto has with things different from itself insofar as it is mere receptivity; i.e., the mind has the capacity to be affected by things that come from outside itself and that are not of its own generation. To the faculty that accounts for this 'receptivity' (Empfänglichkeit), or capacity of being affected by objects from outside us, Kant gives the name of 'sensibility' (Sinnlichkeit): "The capacity (receptivity) to acquire representations through the way in which we are affected by objects is called sensibility" (A19/B33).