1.

Record Nr.

UNISA996205064303316

Titolo

The Cambridge companion to Kant / / edited by Paul Guyer [[electronic resource]]

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Cambridge : , : Cambridge University Press, , 1992

ISBN

1-139-81504-0

1-139-00053-5

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (xii, 482 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)

Collana

Cambridge companions to philosophy

Disciplina

193

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 09 Nov 2015).

Nota di contenuto

Introduction : the starry heavens and the moral law / Paul Guyer -- Kant's intellectual development : 1746-1781 / Frederick C. Beiser -- The transcendental aesthetic / Charles Parsons -- Functions of thought and the synthesis of intuitions / J. Michael Young -- The transcendental deduction of the categories / Paul Guyer -- Causal laws and the foundations of natural science / Michael Friedman -- Empirical, rational, and transcendental psychology : psychology as science and as philosophy / Gary Hatfield -- Reason and the practice of science / Thomas E. Wartenberg -- The critique of metaphysics : Kant and traditional ontology / Karl Ameriks -- Vindicating reason / Onora O'Neill -- Autonomy, obligation, and virtue : an overview of Kant's moral philosophy / J.B. Schneewind.

Politics, freedom, and order : Kant's political philosophy / Wolfgang Kersting -- Taste, sublimity, and genius : the aesthetics of nature and art / Eva Schaper -- Rational theology, moral faith, and religion / Allen W. Wood -- The first twenty years of critique : the Spinoza connection / George Di Giovanni.

Sommario/riassunto

The fundamental task of philosophy since the seventeenth century has been to determine whether the essential principles of both knowledge and action can be discovered by human beings unaided by an external agency. No one philosopher contributed more to this enterprise than Kant, whose Critique of Pure Reason (1781) shook the very foundations of the intellectual world. Kant argued that the basic principles of the



natural science are imposed on reality by human sensibility and understanding, and thus that human beings are also free to impose their own free and rational agency on the world. This 1992 volume is the only systematic and comprehensive account of the full range of Kant's writings available, and the first major overview of his work to be published in more than a dozen years. An internationally recognised team of Kant scholars explore Kant's conceptual revolution in epistemology, metaphysics, philosophy of science, moral and political philosophy, aesthetics, and the philosophy of religion.