Abdullatif Al-Siddiqi's profound work, 'Kant's Philosophy of Mathematics,' offers an in-depth examination of Immanuel Kant's revolutionary insights into the nature and foundations of mathematics. This book meticulously explores Kant's ideas on space, time, geometry, and arithmetic, particularly as articulated in his seminal work, the *Critique of Pure Reason*. Al-Siddiqi analyzes how Kant reconciled the certainty of mathematical knowledge with the limits of human understanding, focusing on his concept of synthetic a priori judgments. The text illuminates Kant's perspective on the role of intuition and understanding in mathematical cognition, providing a critical assessment of his enduring legacy in both philosophy and the history of mathematics.