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This book offers new perspectives on the theoretical elements of
the Opus postumum (OP), Kant's project of a final work which
remained unknown until eighty years after his death. The
contributors read the OP as a central work in establishing the
relation between Kant's transcendental philosophy, his natural
philosophy, practical philosophy, philosophy of religion,
metaphysics, and his broader epistemology. Interpreting the OP is
an important task because it helps reveal how Kant himself tried to
correct and develop his critical philosophy. It also sheds light on
the foundational role of the three Critiques for other
philosophical inquiries, as well as the unified philosophical
system that Kant sought to establish. The chapters in this volume
address a range of topics relevant to the epistemological and
theoretical problems raised in the OP, including the transition
from the Metaphysical Foundations of Natural Science to physics as
an answer to a deficiency in critical thought; the notion of ether
and, more specifically, its transcendental deduction;
self-affection and the self-positing of the subject; and the idea
of God and the system of ideas in the highest standpoint of
transcendental philosophy. Perspectives on Kant's Opus postumum
will be of interest to upper-level students and scholars working on
Kant.
This book investigates various aspects of freedom as developed in
the philosophical systems of Kant and Fichte. Freedom, both Kant
and Fichte insist, does not mean that we can choose or think
independently from all rules or necessity, but rather that we
willingly accept a certain kind of submission under these rules.
Therefore, the conditions of our knowledge affect and inform our
self-understanding, our willing, and the ways we justify our
practical choices. The essays in this volume explore both
philosophers' conceptions of human freedom as they relate to art,
history, politics, and religion. They reveal how integrating
freedom into a system of thought is crucial for our understanding
of modern philosophy. System and Freedom in Kant and Fichte will be
of interest to scholars and advanced students working on Kant,
modern philosophy, and German Studies.
This study presents the historical impact of Kant s Opus postumum,
the philosopher s last unfinished work, in a critical discussion
that extends from the time of the work s initial reception in the
19th century up to contemporary Kant research. The common thread
that unites this study is a systematic historical reconstruction of
the disputes between those interpreters who saw this work as a
major departure on the part of the late Kant from the philosophy of
his critical writings, and others who saw this posthumously
published work as coherently evolving from Kant s earlier
transcendental philosophy."
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