Abstract This paper examines the metaphilosophical aspects of Fichte’s Transcendental Logic , focusing on its role as both a critique of formal logic and a framework for rethinking experience. By engaging with Reinhold’s rational realism and Fries’ psychologism, Fichte’s Wissenschaftslehre ( WL ) offers a dynamic conception of rationality, where experience is not merely the reproduction of given data but a constructive process of inquiry. The paper traces how Fichte positions transcendental logic as a preparatory discipline for philosophy, distinguishing it from both formal logic and empirical psychology. It highlights the recursive nature of the WL , wherein logical laws are not pre-established but emerge through the process of inquiry itself. The paper further explores the implications of Fichte’s approach for understanding the nature of experience and the structure of philosophical thought, showing how transcendental logic functions simultaneously as critique, doctrine and organon. Through a close analysis of the first four lessons of Transzendentale Logik II (1812), this paper clarifies how Fichte’s transcendental methodology enables a reorganization of knowledge and rationality, bridging the divide between logic and metaphysics. Ultimately, the paper argues that Fichte’s conception of logic as a self-reflexive, generative force anticipates key themes in later idealist and pragmatic traditions of thought.
Federico Ferraguto (Thu,) studied this question.