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A collection of essays on the foundational themes of freedom and spontaneity in Immanuel Kant's philosophy.
Sommario
Introduction Kate A. Moran; Part I. Spontaneity: Pure Concepts of the Understanding, Imagination, and Judgment: 1. Kant on imagination and object constitution Rolf-Peter Horstmann; 2. Pure understanding, the categories, and Kant's critique of Wolff Brian A. Chance; 3. Transcendental idealism in the B-Deduction Michael Rohlf; 4. Kant's a priori principle of judgments of taste Jennifer Dobe; Part II. The Inner Value of the World: Freedom as the Keystone of Kant's Moral Philosophy: 5. Guyer on the value of freedom Patricia Kitcher; 6. Kant, Guyer and Tomasello on the capacity to recognize the humanity of others Lucas Thorpe; 7. Does Kantian constructivism rest on a mistake? Julian Wuerth; 8. Moral realism and the inner value of the world Frederick Rauscher; Part III. Freedom as Autonomous Willing: Kant's Sensible Agent: 9. On the many senses of 'self-determination' Karl Ameriks; 10. Inclination, need, and moral misery Kate Moran; 11. Religion and the highest good: speaking to the heart of even the best of us Barbara Herman; Part IV. Freedom on a Bounded Sphere: Kant's Political Philosophy: 12. Right and ethics: a critical tribute to Paul Guyer Allen Wood; 13. From justice to fairness: does Kant's Doctrine of Right imply a theory of distributive justice? Michael Nance and Jeppe von Platz; Postscript: nature and freedom in Kant's practical philosophy Paul Guyer.
Info autore
Kate A. Moran is associate professor at Brandeis University, Massachusetts. She is the author of Community and Progress in Kant's Moral Philosophy (2012) and a number of essays on Kant's moral and political philosophy.