Chris L. Firestone and Nathan Jacobs integrate and interpret the
work of leading Kant scholars to come to a new and deeper
understanding of Kant's difficult book, Religion within the
Boundaries of Mere Reason. In this text, Kant's vocabulary and
language are especially tortured and convoluted. Readers have often
lost sight of the thinker's deep ties to Christianity and
questioned the viability of the work as serious philosophy of
religion. Firestone and Jacobs provide strong and cogent grounds
for taking Kant's religion seriously and defend him against the
charges of incoherence. In their reading, Christian essentials are
incorporated into the confines of reason, and they argue that Kant
establishes a rational religious faith in accord with religious
conviction as it is elaborated in his mature philosophy. For
readers at all levels, this book articulates a way to ground
religion and theology in a fully fledged defense of Religion which
is linked to the larger corpus of Kant's philosophical
enterprise.
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