Kant's moral metaphysics : God, freedom, and immortality

書誌事項

Kant's moral metaphysics : God, freedom, and immortality

edited by Benjamin J. Bruxvoort Lipscomb and James Krueger

De Gruyter, c2010

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 9

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. [319]-331) and index

収録内容

  • Reality, reason, and religion in the development of Kant's ethics / Karl Ameriks
  • Moral imperfection and moral phenomenology in Kant / Benjamin Lipscomb
  • Standpoints and the problem of moral anthropology / Patrick Frierson
  • In search of the phenomenal face of freedom / Jeanine Grenberg
  • Something to love : Kant and the faith of reason / David Sussman
  • Duties, ends and the divine corporation / James Krueger
  • Real repugnance and belief about things-in-themselves : a problem and Kant's three solutions / Andrew Chignell
  • Practical cognition, intuition, and the fact of reason / Patrick Kain
  • Kant's Reidianism: the role of common sense in Kant's epistemology of religious belief / Lee Hardy
  • Kant on the hiddenness of God / Eric Watkins
  • Kant's account of practical fanaticism / Rachel Zuckert

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Morality has traditionally been understood to be tied to certain metaphysical beliefs: notably, in the freedom of human persons (to choose right or wrong courses of action), in a god (or gods) who serve(s) as judge(s) of moral character, and in an afterlife as the locus of a "final judgment" on individual behavior. Some scholars read the history of moral philosophy as a gradual disentangling of our moral commitments from such beliefs. Kant is often given an important place in their narratives, despite the fact that Kant himself asserts that some of such beliefs are necessary (necessary, at least, from the practical point of view). Many contemporary neo-Kantian moral philosophers have embraced these "disentangling" narratives or, at any rate, have minimized the connection of Kant's practical philosophy with controversial metaphysical commitments - even with Kant's transcendental idealism. This volume re-evaluates those interpretations. It is arguably the first collection to systematically explore the metaphysical commitments central to Kant's practical philosophy, and thus the connections between Kantian ethics, his philosophy of religion, and his epistemological claims concerning our knowledge of the supersensible.

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