'With exemplary clarity and command, Morganna Lambeth's reconstructive interpretation of Heidegger's early studies of Kant makes a persuasive case for underappreciated lines of real convergence between the two thinkers (not least on the subject of time). By showing how Heidegger elaborates the most promising of inconsistent strands of Kant's argument, she demonstrates the depths of Heidegger's self-acknowledged philosophical indebtedness to Kant.' Daniel O. Dahlstrom, Boston University
Introduction; 1. The Two-Strand Method of Interpreting Kant; 2. The Receptivity and Spontaneity of Cognition; 3. A Common Root: Heidegger's Foundationalism; 4. The Metaphysical Deduction and Schematism; 5. The Transcendental Deduction; 6. The Form of Time and Self-Affection; Conclusion.