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Kant's Transition Project and Late Philosophy is the first study to
provide a close reading of the connection between texts written by
Kant during 1796 and 1798. Connecting Kant's unfinished book
project, the Opus postumum, with the Metaphysics of Morals, it
identifies and clarifies issues at the forefront of Kant's focus
towards the end of his life. Labelled by Kant as the "Transition
Project", the Opus postumum generates debate among commentators as
to why Kant describes the project as filling a "gap" within his
system of critical philosophy. This study argues for a pervasive
transition project that can be traced through Kant's entire
critical philosophy and is the key to addressing current debates in
the scholarship. By showing that there is not only a Transition
Project in Kant's theoretical philosophy but also a Transition
Project in his practical philosophy, it reveals why an accurate
assessment of Kant's critical philosophy requires a new
understanding of the Opus postumum and Kant's parallel late
writings on practical philosophy. Rather than seeing Kant's late
thoughts on a Transition as afterthoughts, they must be seen at the
centre of his critical philosophy.
Kant's Transition Project and Late Philosophy is the first study to
provide a close reading of the connection between texts written by
Kant during 1796 and 1798. Connecting Kant's unfinished book
project, the Opus postumum, with the Metaphysics of Morals, it
identifies and clarifies issues at the forefront of Kant's focus
towards the end of his life. Labelled by Kant as the "Transition
Project", the Opus postumum generates debate among commentators as
to why Kant describes the project as filling a "gap" within his
system of critical philosophy. This study argues for a pervasive
transition project that can be traced through Kant's entire
critical philosophy and is the key to addressing current debates in
the scholarship. By showing that there is not only a Transition
Project in Kant's theoretical philosophy but also a Transition
Project in his practical philosophy, it reveals why an accurate
assessment of Kant's critical philosophy requires a new
understanding of the Opus postumum and Kant's parallel late
writings on practical philosophy. Rather than seeing Kant's late
thoughts on a Transition as afterthoughts, they must be seen at the
centre of his critical philosophy.
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