An idea · Early Modern · first attested 1781
The Synthetic A Priori
Knowledge that is both genuinely informative and known independent of experience.
Kant's central technical innovation. Mathematics and the principles of natural science (every event has a cause, etc.) are synthetic — they tell us something substantive — yet a priori — known without empirical investigation. They are possible because the mind imposes them on experience. This single move dissolves the rationalist-empiricist deadlock.