In is hanled the famous Kant’s aphorism: “I had to do away with knowledge in order to make room for faith”. In the “Critique of Pure Reason” (Section “About belief, knowledge, and faith”) Kant defines three grades of our subjective confidence in trustworthiness of our judgments: opinion, belief (or faith), and knowledge. It seems that the philosopher did not do away with knowledge at all and even did raise it relatively to belief (and faith). Sure, we ought to give Kant’s irony due. Indeed, there is a significant mention about a ‘Socratic method’ in the same paragraph where the aphorism is found. Though we see that to conjecture a style is an underproductive business. It is possible to see that there is a quite positive content in the aphorism by Kant. And it concerns grades between opinion, belief, and knowledge. We find some deviation from stated by Kant earlier an erroneous estimation of logic which allegedly could not take even one step forward since Aristotle and was seemingly quite completed. Namely,