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The phrases in their context!

Extract from THE CRITIQUE OF PURE REASON

Of these some are more general, and therefore higher, than others; and--as we cannot distinguish what is completely a priori from that which is known to be a posteriori--where shall we draw the line which is to separate the higher and so-called first principles, from the lower and subordinate principles of cognition?
What would be said if we were asked to be satisfied with a division of the epochs of the world into the earlier centuries and those following them?
Does the fifth, or the tenth century belong to the earlier centuries? it would be asked.
In the same way I ask; Does the conception of extension belong to metaphysics?
You answer, "Yes." Well, that of body too?
Yes. And that of a fluid body?
You stop, you are unprepared to admit this; for if you do, everything will belong to metaphysics.
From this it is evident that the mere degree of subordination--of the particular to the general--cannot determine the limits of a science; and that, in the present case, we must expect to find a difference in the conceptions of metaphysics both in kind and in origin.
The fundamental idea of metaphysics was obscured on another side by the fact that this kind of a priori cognition showed a certain similarity in character with the science of mathematics.
Both have the property in common of possessing an a priori origin; but, in the one, our knowledge is based upon conceptions, in the other, on the construction of conceptions.
Thus a decided dissimilarity between philosophical and mathematical cognition comes out--a dissimilarity which was always felt, but which could not be made distinct for want of an insight into the criteria of the difference.
And thus it happened that, as philosophers themselves failed in the proper development of the idea of their science, the elaboration of the science could not proceed with a definite aim, or under trustworthy guidance.
Thus, too, philosophers, ignorant of the path they ought to pursue and always disputing with each other regarding the discoveries which each asserted he had made, brought their science into disrepute with the rest of the world, and finally, even among themselves.
All pure a priori cognition forms, therefore, in view of the peculiar faculty which originates it, a peculiar and distinct unity; and metaphysic is the term applied to the philosophy which attempts to represent that cognition in this systematic unity.
The speculative part of metaphysic, which has especially appropriated this appellation--that which we have called the metaphysic of nature--and which considers everything, as it is (not as it ought to be), by means of a priori conceptions, is divided in the following manner.
Metaphysic, in the more limited acceptation of the term, consists of two parts--transcendental philosophy and the physiology of pure reason.
The former presents the system of all the conceptions and principles belonging to the understanding and the reason, and which relate to objects in general, but not to any particular given objects (Ontologia); the latter has nature for its subject-matter, that is, the sum of given objects--whether given to the senses, or, if we will, to some other kind of intuition--and is accordingly physiology, although only rationalis.
But the use of the faculty of reason in this rational mode of regarding nature is either physical or hyperphysical, or, more properly speaking, immanent or transcendent.
The former relates to nature, in so far as our knowledge regarding it may be applied in experience (in concreto); the latter to that connection of the objects of experience, which transcends all experience.
Transcendent physiology has, again, an internal and an external connection with its object, both, however, transcending possible experience; the former is the physiology of nature as a whole, or transcendental cognition of the world, the latter of the connection of the whole of nature with a being above nature, or transcendental cognition of God.
Immanent physiology, on the contrary, considers nature as the sum of all sensuous objects, consequently, as it is presented to us--but still according to a priori conditions, for it is under these alone that nature can be presented to our minds at all.