Kant's Theory of Evil
An Essay on the Dangers of Self Love and the Aprioricity of History
av Pablo Muchnik
- Format:
- Inbunden (hardback)
- Utgiven:
- 2009-12-03
- Språk:
- Engelska
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Fler böcker av Pablo Muchnik
Rethinking Kant: v. 1Pablo Muchnik (häftad) |
Rethinking Kant: v. 2Pablo Muchnik (inbunden) | |
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344:- Köp
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685:- Köp
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Kundrecensioner
Recensioner i media
Pablo Muchnik's Kant's Theory of Evil provides a fresh and creative perspective on Kant's thinking about human responsibility for good and for evil. It offers a new interpretive strategy for the resolution for key issues that frequently perplexed earlier commentators. Muchnik offers a persuasive defense of the systematic importance of Kant's account of evil within the critical project, locating it as key part of an architectonic of practical reason and a central element of the moral anthropology that begins to emerge in the latter stages of Kant's work. -- Philip J. Rossi This book does a very persuasive job of displaying the consistent and systematic nature of Kant's theory of evil. In so doing, the work elevates the account of evil to a more central position in Kant's overall project, a significant contribution in itself. Along the way, Muchnik navigates the complex by-ways of both the primary and secondary sources with impressive and reassuring command. This book needs to be taken into account by anyone doing serious work on Kant's practical philosophy. -- Gordon Michalson Pablo Muchnik has put his finger on the most difficult problem in Kant's theory of freedom: how can Kant's conviction of the radical freedom of every individual human being to choose between good and evil be reconciled with his equally firm conviction that the human race as a whole has a tendency toward evil? He separates a priori and empirical strands in Kant's complex analysis of human action to resolve this paradox; no one can henceforth discuss this profound issue without taking account of Muchnik's careful study. -- Guyer, Paul Kant's Theory of Evil is a rich and stimulating work that directly confronts some of the most important and intractable problems of Kant's ethics and moral psychology. Muchnik is undoubtedly right in claiming that in his later work, Kant is searching for a way of addressing the first-person experience of human life that is neither a form of naturalistic psychology nor just a part of a pure metaphysics of rational agency. Kant never quite figured out how to square this circle, but Kant's Theory of Evil offers a promising account of how, from basic Kantian insights, we might go on to do so. -- July 19, 2010 Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews Kant's account of the radical evil in human nature belongs to the 'anthropological' side of Kantian ethics which is either totally ignored or wrongly interpreted in standard caricatures of Kantian ethics. But it has recently been receiving more attention from Kant scholarship. Muchnik brings together the different aspects of Kant's theory of evil that often seem to be in tension. In the process, he contributes in a variety of ways to our understanding of Kant's moral psychology. -- Wood, Allen Strongly recommend Muchnik's Kant's Theory of Evil. It is written with a sort of panache that is rarely found in contemporary philosophical scholarship. Throughout, there is a robust engagement with recent secondary literature and Muchnik confronts many of the most difficult problems in Kant's practical philosophy with courage and originality. Kantian Review
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Bloggat om Kant's Theory of Evil
Övrig information
Pablo Muchnik is associate professor of philosophy at Siena College.
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Innehållsförteckning
Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Chapter 1: On the Alleged Vacuity of Kant's Concept of Evil Chapter 3 Chapter 2: Radical Evil and the Architectonic of Practical Reason Chapter 4 Chapter 3: Radical Evil, Inscrutability and Moral Self-Constitution Chapter 5 Chapter 4: The Moral Anthropology of Radical Evil
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