Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 On the Status of “Things-in-Themselves” in Kant's Critical Philosophy
- 2 Kant on Noumenal Causality
- 3 Kant's Cognitive Anthropocentrism
- 4 Kant on Cognitive Systematization
- 5 Kant's Teleological Theology
- 6 Kant on the Limits and Prospects of Philosophy
- 7 On the Reach of Pure Reason in Kant's Practical Philosophy
- 8 On the Rationale of Kant's Categorical Imperative
- 9 On the Unity of Kant's Categorical Imperative
- Notes
- Name Index
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 October 2018
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 On the Status of “Things-in-Themselves” in Kant's Critical Philosophy
- 2 Kant on Noumenal Causality
- 3 Kant's Cognitive Anthropocentrism
- 4 Kant on Cognitive Systematization
- 5 Kant's Teleological Theology
- 6 Kant on the Limits and Prospects of Philosophy
- 7 On the Reach of Pure Reason in Kant's Practical Philosophy
- 8 On the Rationale of Kant's Categorical Imperative
- 9 On the Unity of Kant's Categorical Imperative
- Notes
- Name Index
Summary
An oft-repeated truism has it that every important thinker of the past needs to be reinterpreted in the light of the changed intellectual circumstances of a later present. But there is not only a diachronic variation of circumstances; there is also a perspectival variation of philosophical outlooks in the present. Sooner or later, a student who becomes closely engaged with the work of one of the great thinkers of the past tends to develop a characteristic vision of its impact and bearing. And so it is in this case. For the Kant depicted here is a protopragmatist who differs in significant respects from the Kant envisioned by various other contemporary interpreters.
First and foremost, these essays see Kant as a problem solver whose favored instrument of work is the distinction. Whenever we look to Kant we find him preoccupied with what he sees as essential distinctions: analytic-synthetic, a priori-a posteriori, formal- material, efficient-final, knowledge-belief, theoretical-practical, means-ends, moral-prudential, categorical- factual - the list goes on and on. And all of these distinctions afford tools for addressing philosophical problems that must - as Kant sees it - be resolved through the development of suitable conceptual and doctrinal instrumentalities. The Kant I envision is one who is pervasively concerned with solving philosophical problems by undoing knots of thought by means of distinctions.
A second key point is that the Kant envisioned here is a dedicated systematizer. A follower of Leibniz and Wolff, he not merely seeks answers to questions and solutions to problems, but answers and solutions that fit into a coherent and systematic whole. And this systematic approach indicates that the proper way to illuminate a Kantian position is not just from the local context of its treatment in a particular Kantian work, but by adducing cognate discussions in Kantian texts in areas that may seem remote from the particular discussion at hand.
Though produced on various occasions over many years, the essays collected together here exhibit a thematic and interpretative unity. While most of them are topically focused on specific issues (on things-in-themselves, moral causality, the Categorical Imperative), all of these essays are somehow concerned - and most of them centrally concerned - with the overall nature of Kant's system, his deepest philosophical intentions and most basic commitments.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Kant and the Reach of ReasonStudies in Kant's Theory of Rational Systematization, pp. 1 - 4Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999