[915] A 94, 115, 118. Cf. also end of note to B 134.
[916] Cf. above, pp. lii, 207-12, 243; below, pp. 327-8, 473-7, 515.
[917] This is shown, not only by Kant’s ethical writings, but also by his less formal utterances, especially in his Lectures on Metaphysics and on Religion, in his Reflexionen, and in his Lose Blätter.
[918] Cf. below, pp. 277-8.
[919] Cf. above, pp. l-lii; below, pp. 277 ff., 461-2, 473-7.
[920] In note to B 162 they are indeed identified.
[921] Kant’s vacillating attitude appears in the added phrase “of whose activity we are hardly ever conscious.” Cf. A 78: it is a “blind” power.
[922] Cf. above, p. 225; below, p. 337.
[923] A 138 = B 177.
[924] A 118.