Yes, Schopenhauer offered a reasoned philosophical justification, though it is interpretive, analogical, and builds directly on (while revising) Kant's framework rather than a strict deductive proof. It rests on introspection, the limits of Kantian epistemology, and an extension from self-knowledge to the world.
Key Elements of His Argument
Schopenhauer accepts Kant's core distinction: the world as we know it is phenomenon (appearance or representation, shaped by space, time, and causality—the forms of the Principle of Sufficient Reason), while the thing-in-itself (Ding an sich) is the unknowable ground behind it. Kant argued we cannot know the thing-in-itself positively through theoretical reason, as all knowledge is conditioned by our cognitive forms.
Schopenhauer claims we do have a unique, immediate access to it in one case: our own will (Wille). Here's the reasoning, drawn primarily from The World as Will and Representation (WWR, especially Book II and the Appendix on Kant):
- Immediate Self-Knowledge of Will: Unlike external objects (known only as representations via the senses and intellect), we know our own willing from the "inside." Our body is given to us in two ways: as representation (like other objects) and as will (the direct feeling of striving, desire, action). The act of will bridges the inner and outer: "the act of will is indeed only the closest and most distinct manifestation of the thing-in-itself." This is not mediated by the full Principle of Sufficient Reason in the same way as outer perception.
- The Body as Objectification of Will: The body is not just a representation but the visible manifestation of our will. Actions and bodily movements are objectified will. This reveals the thing-in-itself in its most immediate form for us.
- Analogy/Extension to All Phenomena: Since we are not toto genere (entirely different in kind) from the rest of nature, what we find in ourselves as the inner essence must be the inner essence of everything. Inorganic forces (gravity, magnetism), organic life, animal behavior—all are different grades or objectifications of the same underlying Will: a blind, striving, endless impulse without ultimate goal or intellect (intellect is secondary, a tool of the will). "Will alone is the thing in itself... it is that of which all presentations, all objects, are the phenomenon, the visibility, the objectivisation."
- Critique and Completion of Kant: Schopenhauer argues Kant inconsistently inferred the thing-in-itself via causality (which is phenomenal only) and left it as a negative, empty concept. In places like the resolution of the Third Antinomy (on freedom), Kant gestures toward the will/thing-in-itself as free from phenomenal necessity. Schopenhauer claims to fulfill this by positively identifying it, without violating Kant's limits on knowledge of appearances. He calls his view a direct discovery where Kant's was indirect and flawed.
He qualifies this: Our knowledge of will is not fully adequate or exhaustive (it still appears under the form of time in self-consciousness), and he sometimes speaks of the Will as how the thing-in-itself appears to us (leaving room for mysticism or unknowability beyond that).
Strengths and Criticisms
- Strengths: It provides a coherent, immanent metaphysics that unifies Kantian epistemology with a dynamic view of reality. It explains the "kernel" of nature through introspection, avoiding pure speculation. The analogy from self to world is intuitive for many (e.g., seeing natural forces as "striving").
- Weaknesses/Criticisms: The move from "my will" to "the universal Will" is analogical and inductive, not rigorously deductive—critics see it as inconclusive or question-begging. It seems to violate Kant's strict unknowability of the noumenal. Later interpreters note tensions (e.g., is it fully identical or only "to us"?). Some argue it remains within a double-aspect view rather than true transcendence.
Overall, Schopenhauer's claim is philosophically justified within his system as a bold but motivated extension of Kant, grounded in the privileged epistemic access of self-consciousness. It became central to his pessimism, aesthetics, and ethics (denial of the will-to-live). Many find it insightful even if not universally persuasive. For primary reading, see WWR Vol. 1, §§ 18–22 and the Kant Appendix.