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1 - The contemporary relevance of Kant's work

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Andrew Brook
Affiliation:
Carleton University, Ottawa
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Summary

Kant's contribution

There is a tendency to think of great philosophers of the past as cultural artefacts, intriguing and historically significant, perhaps, but long since superseded. In what must surely rank as one of the most patronizing comments in philosophy, William James expressed just that attitude toward Kant:

Kant's mind is the rarest and most intricate of all possible antique bric-a-brac museums, and connoisseurs and dilettanti will always wish to visit it and see the wondrous and racy contents. The temper of the dear old man about his work is perfectly delectable. And yet he is really … at bottom a mere curio, a ‘specimen’.

But some earlier philosophers are more than cultural artefacts. Even with all that has happened this century, some philosophers of past centuries continue to be fellow workers. We read these philosophers not just as an archaeological dig into our roots but to see what we can still learn from them. Kant is one of these philosophers.

At any rate, I think that is true of Kant's work on the mind. Given what has happened to epistemic foundations and the idea of necessary or a priori truth in the past few decades, it could be argued at least that Kant's epistemology is now merely a cultural artefact. In my view, that is not true of his work on the mind.

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Kant and the Mind , pp. 1 - 23
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1994

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