Walsh reviews and assesses the arguments in Kant's Critique of Pure Reason, claiming that the experience in whose possibility Kant is interested is one which is essentially shared of sharable, creating a Kantian world of appearances as a world of facts, not of things.
I recommend Walsh to anyone starting to read the CPR. Walsh is more in-depth than Ewing but not as tough as Allison. All three are useful. Cayhill's "A Kant Dictionary" is also very good to have. I am reading Kant for fun with a group of friends. We meet twice-a-month at a coffee house in Sewickley PA. I do not know enough to offer a critical review of Walsh other than to say it helped me understand the CPR.
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