Henry Allison
"Whatever begins to exist must have a cause of existence": Hume's analysis and Kant's response
2008
Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 76/3
Gurwitsch's interpretation of Kant: reflections of a former student
1997
in: To work at the foundations, Dordrecht : Springer
Reflections on the banality of (radical) evil: a Kantian analysis
1995
Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 18/2
Causality and causal laws in Kant: a critique of Michael Friedman
1994
in: Kant and contemporary epistemology, Dordrecht : Springer
Apperception and analyticity in the b-deduction
1993
Grazer Philosophische Studien 44
Gurwitsch's interpretation of Kant
1992
Kant-Studien 83
Empirical and intelligible character in the critique of pure reason
1989
in: Kant's practical philosophy reconsidered, Dordrecht : Springer
The Critique of pure reason as transcendental phenomenology
1975
in: Dialogues in phenomenology, Den Haag : Nijhoff
The critique of pure reason as transcendental phenomenology
1975
in: Dialogues in phenomenology, Den Haag : Nijhoff
Transcendental affinity Kant's answer to hume
1974
in: Kant's theory of knowledge, Dordrecht : Springer
Transcendental affinity — Kant's answer to Hume
1972
in: Proceedings of the Third international Kant congress, Dordrecht : Springer