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· ISBN : 9781119576259
· 쪽수 : 196쪽
· 출판일 : 2019-05-30
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Preface v
List of Textual References vii
One: The Rationalist Background
I. I Statement of general programme 1
1.2 Early influences-Pietism and rationalism 3
1.3 Dilucidatio (1755); the principle of sufficient reason; the rationalist concept of God 5
I ·4 Freedom and necessity-an early antinomy 8
1.5 Early essays and letters-the problem of evil in the best of all possible worlds 11
1.6 Theory of the Heavens (1755); The Only Possible Argument for a Demonstration of the Existence of God (1763); early versions of the teleological argument 14
1.7 The Romantic vision of nature as an infinite evolutionary spiritual system 18
Two: The Doctrine of Moral Feeling
2.1 Observations on the Feeling of the Beautiful and the Sublime (1763); morality as founded on the ‘feeling of the beauty and dignity of human nature' 21
2.2 Prize Essay (1764); the influence of the British moralists; formal and material elements in morality; the move from rationalism to analytic method 26
2.3 The stages of Kant's early philosophical development 30
2.4 Fragment (I764); Announcement of Lectures (I765); Kant's uneasy acceptance of moral sense theories 32
Three: The Dreams of Metaphysics
3·I Dreams of a Spirit-Seer (I766); the influence of Swedenborg 34
3.2 The visionary metaphysics of the Dreams; morality as the appearance of an intelligible commerce of spiritual beings; the influence of Rousseau; the origin of the formula of the categorical imperative 37
3·3 Metaphysical scepticism; the primacy of moral action 40
3·4 Inaugural Dissertation (1770); the return to rationalism; intellect and sensibility 42
3·5 The discovery of the mathematical antinomies; the doctrine of transcendental idealism 44
3.6 Morality as known by pure intellect 46
3·7 The collapse of the Dissertation view; its failure to account for Newtonian science; the distinction of reason and intellect 47
3.8 The visionary and dogmatic origins of the Critical view of ethics 50
Four: The Lectures on Ethics
4.1 Lectures on Ethics (I775-81); the early formulation of the Critical view; duty, perfection and happiness 52
4.2 Fragment (circa I775); virtue as the a priori form of happiness 56
4·3 Happiness and belief in God as motives to morality 58
4·4 Morality and religion (I): God, revelation and duty 61
4·5 Letters to J. C. Lavater (1755); morality and religion (2): religion as helping men's moral deficiencies and assuring final fulfilment 63
4.6 The importance of the Lectures 67
Five: The Critical Doctrines of God and The Self
5.I Paralogisms (1781 and 1787); the doctrine of the self (I): the rejection of spiritualism and materialism 69
5.2 Third Antinomy (1781 and 1787); the doctrine of the self (2): the noumenal freedom of the self 75
5·3 Transcendental Dialectic, ch. 3; Fourth Antinomy (I78I and I787); the doctrine of God (I): God as the ideal of reason; necessary being; intellectual intuition; the author of nature 77
5 ·4 The doctrine of God (2): the regulative use of ideas 80
Six: The Postulates of Practical Reason
6.I Critique of Practical Reason, Dialectic (I788); Critique of Teleological Judgment, Appendix (I790); the postulates (I): the summum bonum 84
6.2 The postulates (2): the relation of happiness and morality 88
6.3 The postulates (3): the union of reason and sensibility 91
6.4 The teleological nature of Kant's ethics 95
Seven: The Supreme Principle of Morality
7.I Groundwork (I785); Metaphysic of Morals (I797); the derivation of duties from the categorical imperative 99
7.2 Reason and the ends of nature 107
7·3 The principle of universalisability I I3
7·+ The principle of humanity II8
7·5 The nature of the supreme principle of morality I24
Eight: Nature and Purpose
8.1 Critique of Aesthetic Judgment (1790); beauty as a symbol of morality; sublimity as pointing to a supersensible ground of the unity of reason and nature 131
8.2 Critique of Teleological Judgment (1790); the regulative principle of teleology in biology; the notion of God I 34
8.3 The historical purpose of nature; through struggle to culture and a world-federation 137
8.4 Idea for a Universal History (1784); On the Conjectural Beginning of Human History (1786); Strife of the Faculties (1798); Perpetual Peace (1795); the evolutionary and purposive view of nature; its final subordination to the moral individual 139
Nine: Morality and Religion
9.1 Religion Within the Limits of Reason Alone (1793); the doctrine of innate evil 144
9.2 The necessity of noumenal conversion 147
9·3 Religious symbols; the 'mysteries' of religion 151
9·4 Ecclesiastical and moral faith; the idea of God 155
Ten: The Final View of Ethics
10.1 Opus Postumum (1790-1803); Kant's final metaphysical views 160
10.2 The identification of God and practical reason 164
10.3 Conclusion: the metaphysical context of Kant's ethics 166
10.4 The conflict of rationalism and individualism; wille and willkur 168
10.5 The failure of voluntarism to provide a via media 171
Appendix: Schilpp's Kant's Pre-Critical Ethics 175
Bibliography 178
Index of Names 180
Index of Subjects 182