Abstract
Kant's arguments for the synthetic a priori status of geometry are
generally taken to have been refuted by the development of
non-Euclidean geometries. Recently, however, some philosophers have
argued that, on the contrary, the development of non-Euclidean
geometry has confirmed Kant's views, for since a demonstration of the
consistency of non-Euclidean geometry depends on a demonstration of
its equi-consistency with Euclidean geometry, one need only show that
the axioms of Euclidean geometry have `intuitive content' in order to
show that both Euclidean and non-Euclidean geometry are bodies of
synthetic a priori truths.
Friedman has argued that this defence presumes a polyadic conception
of logic that was foreign to Kant. According to Friedman, Kant held
that geometrical reasoning itself relies essentially on intuition, and
that this precludes the very possibility of non-Euclidean
geometry. While Friedman's characterization of Kant's views on
geometrical reasoning is correct, I argue that Friedman's conclusion
that non-Euclidean geometries are logically impossible for Kant is
not. I argue that Kant is best understood as a proto-constructivist
and that modern constructive axiomatizations (unlike Hilbert-style
axiomatizations) of both Euclidean and non-Euclidean geometry capture
Kant's views on the essentially constructive nature of geometrical
reasoning well.