Unlike Kant’s theory of rationality, insisting that the universe may be understood through the individual’s powers of perception, there are areas of understanding that the human mind, which is limited by its cognitive abilities, may never have access to, as proposed by Hegel’s theory of rationality. (A) Unlike Kant’s theory of rationality, insisting that the universe may be understood through the individual’s powers of perception, there are areas of understanding that the human mind, which is limited by its cognitive abilities, may never have access to, as proposed by Hegel’s theory of rationality.
(B) Insisting that the universe may be understood through the individual’s powers of perception, Kant’s theory of rationality is not like Hegel’s theory that, limited by its cognitive abilities, proposes that the human mind will never have access to certain areas of understanding.
(C) Hegel’s theory of rationality, unlike Kant’s, which insists that the universe may be understood through the individual’s powers of perception, proposes that there are areas of understanding that the human mind, limited by its cognitive abilities, may never have access to.
(D) Even though Hegel’s theory of rationality proposing that the human mind, limited by its cognitive abilities, may never have access to certain areas of understanding, Kant’s theory insists that the universe may be understood through the individual’s powers of perception.
(E) Unlike Hegel’s theory of rationality limited by its cognitive abilities proposing that there are areas of understanding that the human mind may never have access to, Kant’s insists that the universe may be understood through the individual’s powers of perception.