Kant's philosophy has been interpreted by scholars in varied ways- empiricism, rationalism, practical philosophy etc. In this book, a thorough analysis of Kant's philosophy reveals though implicitly an in-depth scrutiny of the nature of the human mind, which at the end, Kant called forms of intuition. This book gives account for the basis of development and takes the mind as the fundamentum or groundwork of development. Though creationism or evolution theory suggests a gradual pattern of growth and advancement to say the least, of human society, the book reveals that this is not ex-nihilo but a conscious and meticulous application of the mind's intuition and categories to evolve, reorder and recreate the human world. The possibility of this is hinged on Kant's transcendental apperception of the mind.