“…At the outset, I considered Einstein’s dissatisfaction with the idea that space, time or causality would have a necessarily privileged status in establishing any possible scientific framework. The account I have sketched here offers the beginnings of a response to the demonstration over the course of the intervening centuries that developments such as ‘spacetime’ or non-Euclidean geometries are at least conceivable, and arguably even intuitable (Helmholtz 1876; Einstein 1924a, 1924b; Richardson 1998: 122), or that the categories of ‘substance’ or ‘causality’ are dispensable in the wake of new physical theories of mass, relation and probabilistic events (Reichenbach 1920: 78). In accounting for such shifts, Kant’s characterization of reflective judgement, as what is called for when the ‘particular, as such, contains something contingent with regard to the universal’ and when ‘the a priori derivation of the particular laws from the universal … is impossible’, suggests important resources for the relativized a priori theorist ( CJ , 5: 404).…”