"…I remark concerning the categories…that their logical employment consists in their use as predicates of objects." Kant called them "ontological predicates." Ī category is that which can be said of everything in general, that is, of anything that is an object. The word comes from the Greek κατηγορία, katēgoria, meaning "that which can be said, predicated, or publicly declared and asserted, about something." A category is an attribute, property, quality, or characteristic that can be predicated of a thing. Kant enumerated twelve distinct but thematically related categories. Following Aristotle, Kant uses the term categories to describe the "pure concepts of the understanding, which apply to objects of intuition in general a priori…" Kant further wrote about the categories: "They are concepts of an object in general, by means of which its intuition is regarded as determined with regard to one of the logical functions for judgments." The categories are the condition of the possibility of objects in general, that is, objects as such, any and all objects, not specific objects in particular. A Kantian category is a characteristic of the appearance of any object in general, before it has been experienced ( a priori). In Immanuel Kant's philosophy, a category ( German: Categorie in the original or Kategorie in modern German) is a pure concept of the understanding ( Verstand).
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