Anthropology, History, and EducationCambridge University Press, 2007 M11 29 Anthropology, History, and Education, first published in 2007, contains all of Kant's major writings on human nature. Some of these works, which were published over a thirty-nine year period between 1764 and 1803, had never before been translated into English. Kant's question 'What is the human being?' is approached indirectly in his famous works on metaphysics, epistemology, moral and legal philosophy, aesthetics and the philosophy of religion, but it is approached directly in his extensive but less well-known writings on physical and cultural anthropology, the philosophy of history, and education which are gathered in the present volume. Kant repeatedly claimed that the question 'What is the human being?' should be philosophy's most fundamental concern, and Anthropology, History, and Education can be seen as effectively presenting his philosophy as a whole in a popular guise. |
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Página 13
... Character in Kant's Philosophy of History. Dissertation, New School for Social Research: 1980. Yovel, Yirmiyahu, Kant and the Philosophy of History. Princeton: 1980. Lutz-Bachmann, Matthias, Geschichte und Subjekt. Studie zu Bedeutung ...
... Character in Kant's Philosophy of History. Dissertation, New School for Social Research: 1980. Yovel, Yirmiyahu, Kant and the Philosophy of History. Princeton: 1980. Lutz-Bachmann, Matthias, Geschichte und Subjekt. Studie zu Bedeutung ...
Página 16
... Character. The “Critical” Link of Morality, Anthropology, and Reflective Judgment. Chicago: 1999. Schmidt, Claudia M., Kant's Transcendental and Empirical Anthropology of Cognition. The Account of the Cognitive Faculties in the ...
... Character. The “Critical” Link of Morality, Anthropology, and Reflective Judgment. Chicago: 1999. Schmidt, Claudia M., Kant's Transcendental and Empirical Anthropology of Cognition. The Account of the Cognitive Faculties in the ...
Página 20
... characters to the traditional division of characters into phlegmatic, melancholic, sanguine, andcholeric;themostinterestingpointhereis hischaracterization ofthe melancholic, not as someone who deprives himself ... character 20 Immanuel Kant.
... characters to the traditional division of characters into phlegmatic, melancholic, sanguine, andcholeric;themostinterestingpointhereis hischaracterization ofthe melancholic, not as someone who deprives himself ... character 20 Immanuel Kant.
Página 21
... character that includes both firmness of principle and sensitivity to the actual feelings of those who are affected by one's actions, and which makes the latter something that must be respected by moral principles. However, there seems ...
... character that includes both firmness of principle and sensitivity to the actual feelings of those who are affected by one's actions, and which makes the latter something that must be respected by moral principles. However, there seems ...
Página 26
... character of the sublime, but sexual love that of the beautiful. Yet tenderness and deep esteem give the latter a certain dignity and sublimity, while 2:212 flighty jocularity and intimacy elevate the coloration of the beautiful in this ...
... character of the sublime, but sexual love that of the beautiful. Yet tenderness and deep esteem give the latter a certain dignity and sublimity, while 2:212 flighty jocularity and intimacy elevate the coloration of the beautiful in this ...
Contenido
11 | |
On the philosophers medicine of the body 1786 | 182 |
From Soemmerrings On the organ of the soul 1796 | 219 |
Intensification extending to perfection | 275 |
On the productive faculty belonging to sensibility according | 284 |
On the faculty of visualizing the past and the future by means | 291 |
On involuntary invention in a healthy state i e on dreams | 297 |
On the cognitive faculty in so far as it is based | 303 |
On character as the way of thinking | 389 |
the face | 396 |
The character of the peoples | 407 |
On the character of the races | 415 |
Main features of the description of the human species | 425 |
Postscript to Christian Gottlieb Mielckes LithuanianGerman | 430 |
Editorial notes | 486 |
General editors preface page | ix |
On the weaknesses and illnesses of the soul with respect to | 309 |
Random remarks | 322 |
The feeling of pleasure and displeasure | 333 |
Glossary 528 | xi |
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