Abstract
My paper focuses on what and how Kant had accomplished with his intended “re-
form of metaphysics” through “reason’s entering the secure path of science”. In this respect, I
will argue that the influence of (pure) sciences on Kant’s programme was a major one, and this
may be best highlighted if one assumes that he developed his mature theory only in the B edi-
tion of his Critique (1787), where the influence of the model of pure a priori sciences turn to be
decisive. This influence, as we already know, is closely related to the “reform of metaphysics”
by “reason’s entering the secure path of science”. My claim is upheld also by the historical ar-
gument that only in the Prolegomena (1783) and in the B edition of the Critique Kant explicitly
conceived the idea of “metaphysics as science”. Therefore, the necessary steps in dealing with
“metaphysics as science” must consider the A Critique, the Prolegomena, and the B Critique in
this precise order. Assuming this order, my approach will involve three parts: in the first I will
investigate the idea of the reform of metaphysics from the A Critique, in the second I will take
into account “reason’s entering the secure path of science” (in the Prolegomena and the B Cri-
tique), i.e., philosophy as science (the discipline within the B Critique); finally, I will argue that
understanding Kant’s “idea of philosophy as science” can best be achieved by focusing on the
role and place that pure sciences have in the transcendental philosophy of the B Critique, where
its structure and content are themed and projected within the methodological frame of the “ex-
periment of pure reason”.