Noun
transcendental idealism (countable and uncountable, plural transcendental idealisms)
(philosophy) A school of philosophy first proposed by Immanuel Kant. It can be juxtaposed with transcendental realism in that it views things in terms of how they appear to the actor rather than how they actually are.
This involved two interconnected foundations of his " critical philosophy ": * the epistemology of transcendental idealism and * the moral philosophy of the autonomy of practical reason. Source: Internet
Ingarden did not accept, however, the later transcendental idealism of Husserl which he thought would lead to relativism. Source: Internet
With extraordinary zeal, he expounded his system of " transcendental idealism ". Source: Internet