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This book examines the significance of Kant's political philosophy in the context of contemporary philosophical and political debates.
Sommario
Introduction
Luigi Caranti and Alessandro Pinzani
1. The practice of sovereignty: Kant on the duties of national and international citizenship
Paul Guyer
2. Kant via Rousseau against democracy
Luigi Caranti
3. A Kantian idea of intergenerational justice
Joel T. Klein
4. Taking economic inequality seriously: Kantian views
Nunzio Alì and Alessandro Pinzani
5. ‘Money, money, money …’: some reflections on Kant and money
Thomas Mertens
6. Kant on social suffering: vulnerability as moral and legal value
Nuria Sánchez Madrid
7. Transnationalism and popular sovereignty
Macarena Marey
8. Autonomy and practical reason in Kant and the feminist criticisms by Benhabib and Allen
Monique Huslhof
Info autore
Luigi Caranti is Professor of Political Philosophy at the Università di Catania. He focuses on Kant, human rights, peace studies and distributive justice. Principal investigator of numerous EU-funded research projects, he is currently coordinating the Marie Curie Rise project “Kant in South America”. Among his recent publications are The Kantian Federation (2022), (ed. with D. Celentano) Paradigms of Justice: Redistribution, Recognition and Beyond (2021) and Kant’s Political Legacy: Human Rights, Peace, Progress (2017).
Alessandro Pinzani is Professor of Ethics and Political Philosophy at the Federal University of Santa Catarina, Florianópolis (Brazil), and, since 2006, a fellow researcher of CNPq (Brazilian Research Council). His publications include Jürgen Habermas (2007), An den Wurzeln moderner Demokratie (2009) and Money, Autonomy, and Citizenship (with W. Leão Rego, 2018).
Riassunto
This book examines the significance of Kant’s political philosophy in the context of contemporary philosophical and political debates.