[895] Cf. above, p. 242; below, pp. 258, 332-3.
[896] Cf. A 111.
[897] A 117 n.
[898] This transcendental psychology is considered below (p. 263 ff.), in its connection with the later stages of the subjective deduction. Cf. above, p. 238.
[899] A 113-14.
[900] Cf. above, p. 229.
[901] Cf. A 100-1.
[902] A 122-3.
[903] Cf. B 140-3; B 151-2; B 164-5 5 and below, p. 286.
[904] Here again the second edition text is more explicit than the first: “This peculiarity of our understanding, that it can produce a priori unity of apperception solely by means of the categories, and only by such and so many, is as little capable of further explanation as why we have just these and no other functions of judgment, or why space and time are the sole forms of our possible intuition.”—B 145-6. Cf. above, pp. xxxiii-vi, xliv, 57, 142, 186; below, pp. 291, 411.