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Kant is probably the philosopher who best typifies the thought and
ideals of the Enlightenment. He was influenced by the modern
physics of Newton, the rationalist perfectionism of Leibniz and
Wolff, the critical empiricism of Locke and Hume, and Rousseau's
celebration of liberty and individualism, and his work can be seen
partly as an attempt to combine and synthesize these various ideas.
In moral philosophy, he developed a radical and radically new
conception of the unconditional value of human autonomy, which he
opposed to both theological and utilitarian conceptions of moral
value. He first expounded his moral vision in the "Groundwork for
the Metaphysics of Morals" (1785), the seminal work of modern moral
philosophy in which he introduced his infamous 'categorical
imperative'. Paul Guyer's Reader's Guide will help readers find
their way in this brilliant but dense and sometimes baffling work.
Paul Guyer is acknowledged as one of the world's foremost Kant
specialists, and he collects here some of his most celebrated
essays from the past decade and a half. The governing theme of the
volume is the role of systematicity in Kant's theoretical and
practical philosophy. Featuring two brand-new papers and an
introduction to orient the reader, Kant's System of Nature and
Freedom will be an essential purchase for anyone working on the
history of philosophy and related areas of ethics, philosophy of
science, and metaphysics.
Values of Beauty discusses major ideas and figures in the history
of aesthetics from the beginning of the eighteenth century to the
end of the twentieth century. The core of the book features Paul
Guyer's most recent essays on the epochal contribution of Immauel
Kant, and sets Kant's work in the context of predecessors,
contemporaries, and successors including David Hume, Alexander
Gerard, Archibald Alison, Arthur Schopenhauer, and John Stuart Mill
All of the essays emphasize the complexity rather than isolation of
our aesthetic experience of both nature and art; and the
interconnection of aesthetic values such as beauty and sublimity on
the one hand, and prudential and moral values on the other. Guyer
emphasizes that the idea of the freedom of the imagination as the
key to both artistic creation and aesthetic experience has been a
common thread throughout the modern history of aesthetics, although
the freedom of the imagination has been understood and connected to
other forms of freedom in a variety of ways.
Kant is often portrayed as the author of a rigid system of ethics
in which adherence to a formal and universal principle of morality
- the famous categorical imperative - is an end itself, and any
concern for human goals and happiness a strictly secondary and
subordinate matter. Such a theory seems to suit perfectly rational
beings but not human beings. The twelve essays in this collection
by one of the world's preeminent Kant scholars argue for a
radically different account of Kant's ethics. They explore an
interpretation of the moral philosophy according to which freedom
is the fundamental end of human action, but an end that can only be
preserved and promoted by adherence to moral law. By radically
revising the traditional interpretation of Kant's moral and
political philosophy and by showing how Kant's coherent liberalism
can guide us in current debates, Paul Guyer will find an audience
across moral and political philosophy, intellectual history, and
political science.
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Notes and Fragments (Hardcover)
Immanuel Kant; Edited by Paul Guyer; Translated by Curtis Bowman, Frederick Rauscher
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R5,838
Discovery Miles 58 380
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This volume provides the first ever extensive translation of the
notes and fragments that survived Kant's death in 1804. These
include marginalia, lecture notes, and sketches and drafts for his
published works. They are important as an indispensable resource
for understanding Kant's intellectual development and published
works, casting new light on Kant's conception of his own
philosophical methods and his relations to his predecessors, as
well as on central doctrines of his work such as the theory of
space, time and categories, the refutations of skepticism and
metaphysical dogmatism, the theory of the value of freedom and the
possibility of free will, the conception of God, the theory of
beauty, and much more.
This entirely new translation of Kant's Critique of the Power of Judgment follows the principles and high standards of all other volumes in The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Immanuel Kant. This volume includes for the first time the first draft of Kant's introduction to the work; the only English edition notes to the many differences between the first (1790) and second (1793) editions of the work; and relevant passages in Kant's anthropology lectures where he elaborated on his aesthetic views.
In this updated edition of his outstanding introduction to Kant,
Paul Guyer uses Kant's central conception of autonomy as the key to
his thought. Beginning with a helpful overview of Kant's life and
times, Guyer introduces Kant's metaphysics and epistemology,
carefully explaining his arguments about the nature of space, time
and experience in his most influential but difficult work, The
Critique of Pure Reason. He offers an explanation and critique of
Kant's famous theory of transcendental idealism and shows how much
of Kant's philosophy is independent of this controversial doctrine.
He then examines Kant's moral philosophy, his celebrated
'categorical imperative' and his theories of duty, freedom of will
and political rights. This section of the work has been
substantially revised to clarify the relation between Kant's
conceptions of "internal" and "external" freedom. In his treatments
of Kant's aesthetics and teleology, Guyer focuses on their relation
to human freedom and happiness. Finally, he considers Kant's view
that the development of human autonomy is the only goal that we can
conceive for both natural and human history. Including a
chronology, glossary, chapter summaries and up-to-date further
reading, Kant, second edition is an ideal introduction to this
demanding yet pivotal figure in the history of philosophy, and
essential reading for all students of philosophy.
Kant's Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals is one of the most
important works in modern moral philosophy. This collection of
essays, the first of its kind in nearly thirty years, introduces
the reader to some of the most important studies of the book from
the past two decades, arranged in the form of a collective
commentary. Visit our website for sample chapters
This volume collects Kant's most important ethical and
anthropological writings from the 1760s, before he developed his
critical philosophy. The materials presented here range from the
Observations, one of Kant's most elegantly written and immediately
popular texts, to the accompanying Remarks which Kant wrote in his
personal copy of the Observations and which are translated here in
their entirety for the first time. This edition also includes
little-known essays as well as personal notes and fragments that
reveal the emergence of Kant's complex philosophical ideas. Those
familiar with Kant's later works will discover a Kant interested in
the 'beauty' as well as the 'dignity' of humanity, in human
diversity as well as the universality of morals, and in practical
concerns rather than abstract philosophizing. Readers will be able
to see Kant's development from the Observations through the Remarks
towards the moral philosophy that eventually made him famous.
The central project of the Critique of Pure Reason is to answer two
sets of questions: What can we know and how can we know it? and
What can't we know and why can't we know it? The essays in this
collection are intended to help students read the Critique of Pure
Reason with a greater understanding of its central themes and
arguments, and with some awareness of important lines of criticism
of those themes and arguments. Visit our website for sample
chapters!
Immanuel Kant s Critique of Pure Reason, first published in 1781,
is one of the landmarks of Western philosophy, a radical departure
from everything that went before and an inescapable influence on
all philosophy since its publication. In this massive work, Kant
has three aims. First, he constructs a new theory of knowledge that
delivers certainty about the fundamental principles of human
experience at the cost of knowledge of how things are in
themselves. Second, he delivers a devastating critique of
traditional speculative metaphysics on the basis of his new theory
of knowledge. Third, he suggests how the core beliefs of the
Western metaphysical tradition that cannot be justified as
theoretical knowledge can, nevertheless, be justified as objects of
moral faith because they are the necessary conditions of the
possibility of moral agency. Kant started this third project in the
Critique of Pure Reason but would go on to complete it in two other
works, Critique of Practical Reason and Critique of the Power of
Judgment. The Cambridge Companion to Kant s Critique of Pure Reason
is the first collective commentary on this work in English. The
seventeen chapters have been written by an international team of
scholars, including some of the best-known figures in the field as
well as emerging younger talents. The first two chapters situate
Kant s project against the background of Continental rationalism
and British empiricism, the dominant schools of early modern
philosophy. Eleven chapters then expound and assess all the main
arguments of the Critique. Finally, four chapters recount the
enormous influence of the Critique on subsequent philosophical
movements, including German Idealism and Neo-Kantianism,
twentieth-century Continental philosophy, and twentieth century
Anglo-American analytic philosophy. The book concludes with an
extensive bibliography.
The concept of systematicity is central to Immanuel Kant's
conception of scientific knowledge and to his practical philosophy.
But Kant also held that we must be able to unite the separate
systems of nature and freedom into a single system: on the one
hand, morality itself requires that we be able to see its commands
and goals as realizable within nature, while on the other hand our
experience of nature itself leads us to see it as a system with the
goal of human moral development. The essays in this volume,
including two published here for the first time, explore various
aspects of Kant's conception of the system of nature, the system of
freedom, and the system of nature and freedom. The essays in the
first part explore the systematicity of concepts and laws as the
ultimate goal of natural science, consider the implications of
Kant's account of our experience of organisms for the goal of the
unity of science, and examine Kant's attempts to prove that the
existence of an ether is a necessary condition for a physical
system of nature. The essays in the second part explore Kant's view
that morality requires a systematic union of persons as ends in
themselves and of the ends that persons set for themselves, and
examine the system of duties and obligations necessary to realize
such a systematic union of persons and their ends. These essays
thus examine both the general foundations of Kant's moral
philosophy and his final account of the duties of right or justice
and of ethics or virtue in his late work, the Metaphysics of
Morals. The essays in the third part examine Kant's attempt, in the
last of his three great critiques, the Critique of the Power of
Judgment., to unify the systems of nature and freedom through a
radical transformation of traditional teleology as a theory of the
creation of organic nature into an account of our experience of
organic nature and of nature as a whole.
Reason and Experience in Mendelssohn and Kant provides the first
in-depth examination of the lifelong intellectual relationship
between two of the greatest figures of the European Enlightenment,
Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) and Moses Mendelssohn (1729-1786). Both
were engaged in a common project of striking the right balance
between rationalism and empiricism. They sometimes borrowed from
one another, often disagreed with one another, and can usefully be
compared even when they did not directly interact. Guyer examines a
series of comparisons and contrasts: their arguments and
conclusions on a range of metaphysical issues, including proofs of
the existence of God, immortality, and idealism; their shared
interests in aesthetics; and their path-breaking work on the
"religion of reason" and the separation of church and state.
Setting the work of both philosophers in historical context, Guyer
shows that, where Kant sometimes provides deeper insight into the
underlying structure of human thought, Mendelssohn is often the
deeper student of the variety of human experience. This is evident
above all in their treatments of aesthetics and religion:
Mendelssohn recognizes more deeply than Kant the emotional impact
of art, and while Kant imagines that organized religion will one
day be superseded by pure morality, Mendelssohn argued that
organized religion in all its varieties seems here to stay, and so
toleration for religious variety is an inescapable requirement of
human morality. Based on an exhaustive study of a wide range of
texts, this study demonstrates the on-going relevance of Kant and
Mendelssohn to modern thought.
This book tells the story of idealism in modern philosophy, from
the seventeenth century to the turn of the twenty-first. Paul Guyer
and Rolf-Peter Horstmann define idealism as the reduction of all
reality to something mental in nature. Rather than distinguishing
between metaphysical and epistemological versions of idealism, they
distinguish between metaphysical and epistemological motivations
for idealism. They argue that while metaphysical arguments for
idealism have only rarely been accepted, for example by Bishop
Berkeley in the early eighteenth century and the British idealists
Bradley and McTaggart in the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries, epistemological arguments for idealism have been widely
accepted, even in the so-called analytic philosophy of the
twentieth century. Guyer and Horstmann discuss many philosophers
who have played a role in the development of idealism, from
Descartes, Hobbes, Spinoza, Leibniz, Locke, Berkeley, and Hume,
through Kant; the German idealists Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel;
Schopenhauer and Nietzsche; the British and American idealists such
as Green and Royce in addition to Bradley and McTaggart; G.E. Moore
and Bertrand Russell, Neo-Kantians such as Ernst Cassirer; and
twentieth-century philosophers such as Wittgenstein, Collingwood,
Carnap, Sellars, and McDowell.
The philosophy of Immanuel Kant is the watershed of modern thought,
which irrevocably changed the landscape of the field and prepared
the way for all the significant philosophical movements of the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This 2006 volume, which
complements The Cambridge Companion to Kant, covers every aspect of
Kant's philosophy, with a particular focus on his moral and
political philosophy. It also provides detailed coverage of Kant's
historical context and of the enormous impact and influence that
his work has had on the subsequent history of philosophy. The
bibliography also offers extensive and organized coverage of both
classical and recent books on Kant. This volume thus provides the
broadest and deepest introduction currently available on Kant and
his place in modern philosophy, making accessible the philosophical
enterprise of Kant to those coming to his work for the first time.
In this updated edition of his outstanding introduction to Kant,
Paul Guyer uses Kant's central conception of autonomy as the key to
his thought. Beginning with a helpful overview of Kant's life and
times, Guyer introduces Kant's metaphysics and epistemology,
carefully explaining his arguments about the nature of space, time
and experience in his most influential but difficult work, The
Critique of Pure Reason. He offers an explanation and critique of
Kant's famous theory of transcendental idealism and shows how much
of Kant's philosophy is independent of this controversial doctrine.
He then examines Kant's moral philosophy, his celebrated
'categorical imperative' and his theories of duty, freedom of will
and political rights. This section of the work has been
substantially revised to clarify the relation between Kant's
conceptions of "internal" and "external" freedom. In his treatments
of Kant's aesthetics and teleology, Guyer focuses on their relation
to human freedom and happiness. Finally, he considers Kant's view
that the development of human autonomy is the only goal that we can
conceive for both natural and human history. Including a
chronology, glossary, chapter summaries and up-to-date further
reading, Kant, second edition is an ideal introduction to this
demanding yet pivotal figure in the history of philosophy, and
essential reading for all students of philosophy.
'Pain and pleasure are simple ideas, incapable of definition.' In
1757 the 27-year-old Edmund Burke argued that our aesthetic
responses are experienced as pure emotional arousal, unencumbered
by intellectual considerations. In so doing he overturned the
Platonic tradition in aesthetics that had prevailed from antiquity
until the eighteenth century, and replaced metaphysics with
psychology and even physiology as the basis for the subject.
Burke's theory of beauty encompasses the female form, nature, art,
and poetry, and he analyses our delight in sublime effects that
thrill and excite us. His revolution in method continues to have
repercussions in the aesthetic theories of today, and his
revolution in sensibility has paved the way for literary and
artistic movements from the Gothic novel through Romanticism,
twentieth-century painting, and beyond. In this new edition Paul
Guyer conducts the reader through Burke's Enquiry, focusing on its
place in the history of aesthetics and highlighting its
innovations, as well as its influence on many subsequent authors
from Kant and Schiller to Ruskin and Nietzsche. ABOUT THE SERIES:
For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has made available the
widest range of literature from around the globe. Each affordable
volume reflects Oxford's commitment to scholarship, providing the
most accurate text plus a wealth of other valuable features,
including expert introductions by leading authorities, helpful
notes to clarify the text, up-to-date bibliographies for further
study, and much more.
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