In Kant's Rational Theology, Allen W. Wood explores Kant's views
on the concept of God and on the attempt to demonstrate God's
existence. "We cannot have a full or balanced understanding of
Kant's thought on religious subjects," he writes, "as long as we
fail to take account of his reflections, often exceedingly
abstract, obscure, and subtle, concerning the rational origin,
content, and status of our concept of a supreme being."
The importance of this aspect of Kantian thought, according to
Wood, lies in its originality, in its historical influence, and in
the insights it affords into the tradition of rational theology in
medieval and modern philosophy. He believes that it also provides a
means of understanding Kant's work as a whole and of achieving a
proper appreciation of the contents of Kant's moral faith.
The author focuses on Kant's chapter on the ideal or pure reason
from the Critique of Pure Reason and also discusses other Kantian
writings (especially the Lectures on Philosophical Theology, the
Critique of Judgment, and several of Kant's precritical essays)
where the topic of rational theology is prominent. A concise
recapitulation and critical assessment of Kant's more speculative
theses, this book is a complement to Wood's earlier book, Kant's
Moral Religion.
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