Thomas Baldwin writes that Strawson aims to " extricate what he sees as the profound truths concerning the presuppositions of objective experience and judgment that Kant's transcendental arguments establish from the mysterious metaphysics of Kant's transcendental idealism . " Baldwin observes that Strawson's critics have argued that this attempt leads to an unstable position.
42.
J . G . Fichte and Arthur Schopenhauer, for example, are sharply differing writers who focused on questions raised by Kant; but Schopenhauer's doctrine of the will or Fichte's dialectical spin on transcendental idealism could hardly be seen as examples of inquiries that close off " fundamental " questions in order to consider technical problems of " application ."