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Summary

Immanuel Kant (1724–1804) is the most influential thinker in modern western philosophy. 

The central doctrine of Kant’s theoretical philosophy is what he calls “transcendental idealism.”  This is, roughly, the view that there is a sharp distinction between things as they appear to us and things as they really are (in themselves). It is controversial what that distinction consists in or even how to characterize it, but it is clear that Kant wants to deny that things-in-themselves have spatio-temporal features.  Thus they are things that we can think about (‘noumena’) but not things that appear (‘phenomena’). 

Kant argues that we can only explain our knowledge of non-trivial (‘synthetic’) necessary principles -- including the principle according to which all events have causes --  if transcendental idealism is true.  He also thinks that distinguishing between phenomena and noumena leaves room for incompatibilist freedom, God, and the immortality of the soul (at the noumenal level). 

Kant places the notion of autonomy at the center of his moral and political philosophy, and argues that specific moral obligations are based in a very general principle called the Categorical Imperative.  This principle is fundamental to practical rationality and requires that we respect the autonomy of rational agents and refuse to make arbitrary exceptions for ourselves. 

In his early years, Kant was trained in the German rationalist tradition of Christian Wolff (1679–1750) and G. W. Leibniz (1646–1716). But he was influenced by the British Empiricists like John Locke (1632–1704), Isaac Newton (1642–1727), and David Hume (1711–1776). Later, Kant characterizes his Critical philosophy as a synthesis of rationalism and empiricism. 

Kant’s massive influence is felt across the continental and analytic traditions. He is typically regarded as the forefather of German Idealism, and a key figure in the development of Existentialism, NeoKantianism (obviously), Phenomenology, Critical Theory, and even Post-Modernism. 

In the analytic tradition, Kant’s views were in the background of many of the debates in 20th-century epistemology and philosophy of mind. Kantian moral philosophy is one of the main positions in contemporary ethics, and Kantian political philosophy dominated most of the discussion in 20th and early 21st century political philosophy. Kant’s views about aesthetic judgment are central to many developments in the philosophy of art and art criticism. Kant is not a major figure in contemporary analytic metaphysics, however.

Key works

The three Critiques are the central texts for Kant’s “critical system”: Critique of Pure Reason (1781/1787), Critique of Practical Reason (1788), Critique of Power of Judgment (1790). His Groundwork for the Metaphysics of Morals (1785) is among the most influential works in modern ethics. Other major works include Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics (1783), Metaphysical Foundations of Natural Science (1786), Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason (1793)Metaphysics of Morals (1797), and Anthropology from a Pragmatic Point of View (1798)

The standard German edition of Kant’s works is Königlichen Preußischen (later Deutschen) Akademie der Wissenschaften (ed.), 1900–, Kants gesammelte Schriften, Berlin: Georg Reimer (later Walter De Gruyter). The standard English edition of Kant’s works is P. Guyer and A. Wood (eds.), 1992–, The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Immanuel Kant, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Introductions Good overall introductions include Wood 2004, Farrier 1994, and Guyer 2006Buroker 2006 offers a good introductory overview of Kant’s key text in theoretical philosophy. Cleve 1999 is a more advanced introduction for analytic philosophers. Gardner 1999 is an opinionated but very accessible introduction.  A good introduction to Kant's moral philosophy is Sedgwick 2008.
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Kant: Metaphysics and Epistemology (11,604 | 3,037)

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  1. Limits of intelligibility: Issues from Kant and Wittgenstein, edited by Jens Pier, New York and London, Routledge, 2023, pp. xii + 308, £108.00 (hb), ISBN: 9780367689629. [REVIEW]Francesco Gandellini - 2025 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 33 (1):195-200.
    The essays collected in this volume discuss, in different styles and to various extents, a relatively neglected theme in philosophy. This theme is the limits of intelligibility or, in the editor’s...
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  2. Kant y el cristianismo.Rogelio Rovira - 2021 - Barcelona: Herder.
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  3. Dictatorship and Insurrection in Schlegel’s Republicanism.Fiorella Tomassini - forthcoming - In Reidar Maliks & Elizabeth Widmer (eds.), Kantian Foundations of Democracy. Routledge.
    This chapters explores Schlegel’s view on transitional forms of republicanism in his Essay on the Concept of Republicanism Occasioned by the Kantian Tract Perpetual Peace (1796). These rightful – but necessarily temporally limited – types of collective action are insurrection and provisional dictatorship. These forms of republicanism are absent in Kant’s theory of right, as they are manifestly incompatible with his account of popular sovereignty. Since Schlegel endorses a different view of sovereignty, the people, and the state, he is able (...)
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  4. Begriffslogische und begriffsgeschichtliche Wegmarken zur "Kritik der reinen Vernunft": Interpretationen ausgewählter Stellen des ersten Teils.Martin Walter - 2022 - Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann.
    Kant urteilt: 'Wolffii Logic ist die beste, die man antrifft'. Und in der Kritik schreibt er: 'Im zukünftigen System der Metaphysik müssen wir dereinst der strengen Methode des berühmten Wolff, des grössten unter allen dogmatischen Philosophen, folgen'. Logik und Metaphysik bedingen einander. Ausgewählte, begriffslogische Wegmarken zur Kritik können den Lektüreweg folglich erleichtern. Texte der damaligen Schullogik (Gottsched, Marquardt etc.) verdeutlichen Kants Terminologie und erleichtern den Zugang zu seinen Gedanken. Kontrastierend wird eine Abgrenzung zur Logik der Idealisten vorgenommen.
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  5. "Mit dem Schönen ist es ganz anders bewandt.": eine Auseinandersetzung mit der Kritik der ästhetischen Urteilskraft.Jens Kulenkampff - 2022 - Frankfurt am Main: Vittorio Klostermann.
    'It is quite different with the beautiful.' But what about it, then? According to Kant, this can only be revealed by analyzing the judgment by which we attribute beauty. Tracing the often-rocky path of this analysis, fraught with all sorts of pitfalls, in order to see how Kant arrives at the concept of beauty as a form of purposiveness without purpose, and what exactly this concept means, is still very rewarding. However, in doing so, it is important to defend Kant (...)
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  6. Praktische Philosophie bei Kant: Metaphysik und moralisches Selbstverständnis.Maximilian Forschner - 2022 - Darmstadt: Wbg Academic.
    'In die Metaphysik verliebt'...war Immanuel Kant, wie er selbst bekannte. Und so würdigt Maximilian Forschner in der hier vorgelegten Bilanz seiner jahrzehntelangen Beschäftigung mit Kants praktischer Philosophie zwar die innovative Leistung des grossen Philosophen, stellt sein Denken aber zugleich in den Traditionsrahmen der abendländischen Metaphysik. Diese Perspektive hat heute eine besondere Bedeutung und Aktualität, da Kant etwa durch Jürgen Habermas zu einem der Pioniere 'nachmetaphysischen' Denkens erhoben wurde"--Page 4 of cover.
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  7. Robert Clewis on Kant and Aesthetic Normativity.Jessica J. Williams - forthcoming - Kantian Review:1-7.
    In the Origins of Kant’s Aesthetics, Robert Clewis characterises Kant’s early views of aesthetic normativity in terms of a synthesis of a rationalist appeal to laws of sensibility and an empiricist appeal to rules of taste that are arrived at through consensus about great works of art. On the consensus approach, sharing the experience of beauty with others is itself a source of pleasure and normativity. For Clewis, the mature Kant no longer ties aesthetic normativity to sociality, but instead grounds (...)
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  8. American Reconstruction and the Abolition of Second Slavery: On Pascoe’s Intersectional Critique of Kant’s Theory of Labour.Elvira Basevich - 2024 - Kantian Review 29 (2):229-237.
    To highlight the promise of Jordan Pascoe’s Kant’s Theory of Labour, my comments concern the diagnostic and prescriptive dimensions of the book’s excellent intersectional critique of dependent labour relations. The diagnostic dimension of Pascoe’s critique establishes that the organisation of dependent labour relations is a neglected problem of Kantian justice. The prescriptive dimension offers solutions to this problem but is underdeveloped. To enhance the book’s prescriptive dimension, I draw on the noted Africana philosopher W. E. B. Du Bois for guidance. (...)
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  9. Jordan Pascoe’s Kant’s Theory of Labour: A Kantian Engagement.Helga Varden - 2024 - Kantian Review 29 (2):249-256.
    This article critiques Jordan Pascoe’s Kant’s Theory of Labour (CUP 2022). After outlining some of its many distinctive contributions, I consider Pascoe’s ideas on women, marriage, method, and the challenges involved in engaging with (classical) texts that express various ‘isms’. In addition to giving readers an introduction to many of the exciting ideas presented in the book, my aim is to stimulate further discussion of the kind all excellent books strive to create.
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  10. Kant’s Critique of the Ontological Argument: Comments on Ian Proops’s The Fiery Test of Critique.Anja Jauernig - 2024 - Kantian Review 29 (2):277-287.
    The main interpretative claims in the chapter on Kant’s critique of the ontological argument in Ian Proops’s The Fiery Test of Critique are critically discussed.
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  11. ‘“I think” is the Sole Text of Rational Psychology’: Comments on Ian Proops’s The Fiery Test of Critique.Béatrice Longuenesse - 2024 - Kantian Review 29 (2):299-308.
    I focus on two main points in Ian Proops’s reading of Kant’s Paralogisms of Pure Reason: the structure of the paralogisms in the A edition of the Critique of Pure Reason, and the changes in Kant’s exposition of the paralogisms from A to B. I agree with Proops that there are defects in the A exposition and that Kant attempted to correct those defects in B. But I argue that Proops fails to give its due to what remains fundamental in (...)
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  12. Andrew Jones, How Kant Matters for Biology. A Philosophical History Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2023 Pp. xii + 233 ISBN 9781786839732 (hbk) £75.00. [REVIEW]Anton Kabeshkin - 2024 - Kantian Review 29 (2):331-334.
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  13. Proops’s ‘Nugget of Gold’ in Kant’s Dialectic.Desmond P. Hogan - 2024 - Kantian Review 29 (2):267-275.
    The Fiery Test of Critique describes Kant’s indirect proof of idealism from the Antinomy of Pure Reason as the ‘nugget of gold’ in the Critique of Pure Reason’s Transcendental Dialectic. Here, I offer critical reflections on Proops’s reading of Kant’s indirect proof.
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  14. Ian Proops: Kant on Transcendental Freedom ( The Fiery Test of Critique: Chs. 11–12).Allen Wood - 2024 - Kantian Review 29 (2):309-316.
    Kant’s position on the problem of free will can be perplexing and frustrating: all the real questions about human agential capacities or even about issues of moral imputability are empirical questions, which have empirical answers. But there remains a metaphysical or transcendental problem about the possibility of freedom, which is forever insoluble. Ian Proops’ discussion in The Fiery Test of Critique is to be commended for displaying the rare virtue of appreciating this last point and presenting Kant’s position about it (...)
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  15. Working Oneself Up and Universal Basic Income.Martin Sticker - 2024 - Kantian Review 29 (2):239-247.
    I respond to a challenge raised by Jordan Pascoe: Kant’s conception of obtaining full citizenship through working oneself up necessarily condemns some people to passive citizenship. I argue that we should not focus on work to establish universal full citizenship. Rather, a Universal Basic Income, an income paid regularly to everyone and without conditions, can secure everyone’s full citizenship. Moreover, I argue that such a scheme is more Kantian in nature than hitherto assumed.
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  16. Followability, Necessity, and Excuse: Interpreting Kant’s Penal Theory.Robert Campbell - 2024 - Kantian Review 29 (2):169-186.
    Philosophers traditionally interpret Kant as a retributivist, but modern interpreters, with reference to Kant’s theory of justice and problematic passages, instead propose penal theories that mix retributive and deterrent features. Although these mixed penal theories are substantively compelling and capture the Kantian spirit, their dual aspects lead to a justificatory conflict that generates an apparent dilemma. To resolve this dilemma and clear the ground for these mixed theories, I will outline and reinterpret Kant’s penal theory by situating it in his (...)
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  17. Understanding the First Paralogism: A Friendly Disagreement.Patricia Kitcher - 2024 - Kantian Review 29 (2):289-298.
    My comments focus on Proops’s treatment of the Paralogisms. I agree with many aspects of his discussion, including his views about the project of Rational Psychology and his analyses of how, exactly, the arguments of the Paralogisms are defective in form, but I disagree with his interpretation of the First Paralogism. I argue that the source of confusion that Kant diagnoses is not the grammatical distribution of ‘I’ as singular, but the fact that the I-representation is both empty and necessary (...)
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  18. Luigi Filieri, Sintesi e Giudizio. Studio su Kant e Jakob Sigismund Beck Pisa: Edizioni ETS, 2020 Pp. 342 ISBN 9788846758699 (pbk) €30.00. [REVIEW]Gualtiero Lorini - 2024 - Kantian Review 29 (2):341-345.
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  19. Owen Ware, Kant on Freedom Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2023 Pp. 64 ISBN 9781009074551 (pbk) £17.00. [REVIEW]Uygar Abaci - 2024 - Kantian Review 29 (2):337-341.
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  20. ‘In Itself’: A New Investigation of Kant’s Adverbial Wording of Transcendental Idealism.Tobias Rosefeldt - 2024 - Kantian Review 29 (2):209-227.
    This article offers the first systematic investigation of the linguistic forms in which Kant expresses his transcendental idealism since Gerold Prauss’ seminal book Kant und das Problem der Dinge an sich. It is argued that Prauss’ own argument for the claim that ‘in itself’ is an adverbial expression that standardly modifies verbs of philosophical reflection is flawed and that there is hence very poor exegetical evidence for so-called ‘methodological two-aspect’ interpretations of Kant’s transcendental idealism. A comprehensive investigation of Kant’s adverbial (...)
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  21. Between Faith and Judgement: Kant’s Dual Conception of Moral Certainty.Sara Di Giulio - 2024 - Kantian Review 29 (2):187-207.
    There are two main meanings in Kant’s concept of moral certainty (moralische Gewissheit, certitudo moralis): first, it applies to the kind of certainty embodied in rational faith in the existence of God and a future life; second, it applies to the conscientiousness (Gewissenhaftigkeit) required of an agent in the practice of moral judgement. Despite the growing attention to Kant’s theory of conscience and his concept of conscientiousness, this article is the first to discuss ‘moral certainty’ as the aim of ‘conscientiousness’ (...)
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  22. Animals, humans, and Kant.Leslie Stevenson - 2023 - Valencia: Tirant Humanidades.
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  23. La realizzazione della ragione: saggio su Kant e l'idealismo.Antonio Branca - 2024 - Pisa: Edizioni ETS.
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  24. Kant's system of systems.Paul Guyer - 2025 - In Gabriele Gava, Thomas Sturm & Achim Vesper (eds.), Kant and the systematicity of the sciences. New York: Routledge.
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  25. The systematicity of natural science : logical and real.Eric Watkins - 2025 - In Gabriele Gava, Thomas Sturm & Achim Vesper (eds.), Kant and the systematicity of the sciences. New York: Routledge.
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  26. Systematicity with a worldly orientation? On Kant's theory and practice of gazing with an "eye of philosophy".Huaping Lu-Adler - 2025 - In Gabriele Gava, Thomas Sturm & Achim Vesper (eds.), Kant and the systematicity of the sciences. New York: Routledge.
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  27. Systematicity in Kant's philosophy of history.Andree Hahmann - 2025 - In Gabriele Gava, Thomas Sturm & Achim Vesper (eds.), Kant and the systematicity of the sciences. New York: Routledge.
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  28. Systematicity and the definition of a science : physics in Kant's Opus postumum.Stephen Howard - 2025 - In Gabriele Gava, Thomas Sturm & Achim Vesper (eds.), Kant and the systematicity of the sciences. New York: Routledge.
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  29. Systematicity, the life sciences, and the possibility of laws concerning life.Hein van den - 2025 - In Gabriele Gava, Thomas Sturm & Achim Vesper (eds.), Kant and the systematicity of the sciences. New York: Routledge.
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  30. Kant's conception of the metaphysical foundations of natural science : subject matter, method, and aim.Thomas Sturm - 2025 - In Gabriele Gava, Thomas Sturm & Achim Vesper (eds.), Kant and the systematicity of the sciences. New York: Routledge.
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  31. Systematic unity and construction in the theory of conic sections.Katherine Dunlop - 2025 - In Gabriele Gava, Thomas Sturm & Achim Vesper (eds.), Kant and the systematicity of the sciences. New York: Routledge.
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  32. Kant and the idea of a system of logic.Clinton Tolley - 2025 - In Gabriele Gava, Thomas Sturm & Achim Vesper (eds.), Kant and the systematicity of the sciences. New York: Routledge.
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  33. Kant's early cosmology, systematicity, and changes in the standpoint of the observer.Fabian Burt & Thomas Sturm - 2025 - In Gabriele Gava, Thomas Sturm & Achim Vesper (eds.), Kant and the systematicity of the sciences. New York: Routledge.
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  34. Lambert's system of the sciences.Henny Blomme - 2025 - In Gabriele Gava, Thomas Sturm & Achim Vesper (eds.), Kant and the systematicity of the sciences. New York: Routledge.
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  35. Kant and Crusius on the hierarchy of human ends.Gabriele Gava - 2025 - In Gabriele Gava, Thomas Sturm & Achim Vesper (eds.), Kant and the systematicity of the sciences. New York: Routledge.
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  36. Introduction. The significance of Kant's account of scientific systematicity.Gabriele Gava, Thomas Sturm & Achim Vesper - 2025 - In Gabriele Gava, Thomas Sturm & Achim Vesper (eds.), Kant and the systematicity of the sciences. New York: Routledge.
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  37. Perfection and morality.Stephen Engstrom - 2025 - In Melissa Merritt (ed.), Kant and Stoic ethics. New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press.
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  38. Kant on the unity and plurality of the virtues.Katja Maria Vogt - 2025 - In Melissa Merritt (ed.), Kant and Stoic ethics. New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press.
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  39. Duties and permissable actions in the early stoics and Kant.Iakovos Vasiliou - 2025 - In Melissa Merritt (ed.), Kant and Stoic ethics. New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press.
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  40. Giovanni Pietro Basile and Ansgar Lyssy (eds.), System and Freedom in Kant and Fichte. New York: Routledge, 2022. Pp. xv + 232. ISBN 0367480585 (hbk) $144.00. [REVIEW]Jacqueline Mariña - forthcoming - Kantian Review:1-6.
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  41. Kant's critical philosophy for English readers.Immanuel Kant - 1915 - New York,: Macmillan & co..
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  42. Kant’s Mathematical World, by Daniel Sutherland.Katherine Dunlop - 2025 - Mind 134 (533):247-256.
    Kant’s Mathematical World (KMW) is a strikingly original, richly detailed account of Kant’s philosophy of mathematics as a reckoning with the long-held understa.
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  43. Der begriff des rechts bei Kant..Kurt Lisser - 1922
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  44. L'anthropologie philosophique chez Kant et Novalis.Laure Cahen-Maurel - 2024 - Symphilosophie: International Journal of Philosophical Romanticism 6:203-230.
    This article presents a reading of the famous fragment 16 of Novalis’s "Pollen" vis-à-vis Kant’s "Anthropology from a Pragmatic Point of View", two writings published in the same year of 1798. It aims to show that fragment 16 of "Pollen" is in nuce a reformulation of the traditional question of anthropology, which Kant viewed during the same period as reuniting the whole field of philosophy. Kant’s philosophical anthropology remains essentially empirical at base and understands the pragmatic element from the external (...)
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  45. Therapeutics of the Blue Flower: On Dietrich von Engelhardt’s Medizin in Romantik und Idealismus.David W. Wood - 2024 - Symphilosophie: International Journal of Philosophical Romanticism 6:371-383.
    This is a review essay in English of Dietrich von Engelhardt’s new 2,000-page, four-volume project: 'Medizin in Romantik und Idealismus: Gesundheit und Krankheit in Leib und Seele, Natur und Kultur' (Medicine in Romanticism and Idealism: Health and Illness in Body and Soul, Nature and Culture). (Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt: frommann-holzboog, 2023), 4 Vols., LII + 1964 pp.
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  46. Robert Clewis and the Origins of Kant’s Conception of Aesthetics.J. Colin McQuillan - forthcoming - Kantian Review:1-6.
    Robert Clewis focuses on a number of different themes in Kant’s precritical and critical aesthetics in The Origins of Kant’s Aesthetics. Clewis carefully documents where Kant’s views on these themes are the same, where they are different, and why; yet his approach might give readers the impression that Kant lacks a unified conception of aesthetics. I show, on the contrary, that the method and sources Clewis employs also reveal the frameworks within which Kant addresses the themes that Clewis discusses in (...)
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  47. Beautiful or Agreeable? Humour and Wit in The Origins of Kant’s Aesthetics.Melissa Zinkin - forthcoming - Kantian Review:1-8.
    In this paper, I explore what Robert Clewis, in The Origins of Kant’s Aesthetics, suggests is an ‘analogy’ between humour and beauty. I do this by focusing on Kant’s concept of wit (Witz), which is central to both reflective judgement and humour. By exploring the concept of Witz as a distinctive kind of cognitive activity, I believe a case can be made that the origin of Kant’s mature aesthetic theory in the Critique of the Power of Judgement and his discovery (...)
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  48. Catherine Wilson, Kant and the Naturalistic Turn of 18th Century Philosophy. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2022. Pp. vii + 320. ISBN 9780192847928 (hbk) £90.00. [REVIEW]Paolo Pecere - forthcoming - Kantian Review:1-5.
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  49. “Máquina engañosa”: sobre la apariencia ilusoria (Schein) en Kant.Osvaldo Montero Salas - 2023 - Revista de Filosofía 40 (106):118-138.
    Immanuel Kant ha representado un hito crucial en múltiples esferas del pensamiento humano. Su tratamiento del arcaico problema de la apariencia no escapa a esta premisa. Sin embargo, su destacada contribución en este particular no se corresponde con la atención y profundidad brindada por los principales estudios de su obra. El presente trabajo tiene como objetivo exponer exhaustivamente la problemática de la apariencia ilusoria según la perspectiva de Kant. En primer lugar, se llevará a cabo una sucinta revisión del tratamiento (...)
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  50. Permissible Expressions of Asceticism in Kant and Nietzsche.Charles Duke - forthcoming - The European Legacy.
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900) criticized Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) and the heirs of his philosophical edifice for their enslavement to the ascetic ideal. At times, Nietzsche’s ascetic priest functions as a representative of Kant. However, Kant confronted accusations of promoting asceticism in his own time from thinkers like Friedrich Schiller (1759-1805). In his replies, Kant not only clarified his disregard for the “monkish asceticism” of which he was accused, but he employed the term “ascetic” positively in *The Metaphysics of Morals* to detail (...)
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