(“Back to Kant!”)
(Critics of Kant sometimes miss this point.)
“I neither want to refute Kant nor put Kant in his place,” Moten said.
Others attributed to Kant some form of empirical psychologism.
In § 18 Kant introduces the distinction as follows (4, 298; 51):
Having criticized Newton, Kant now reconsidered his stance on Newtonian physics.
For Kant, the only thing unqualifiedly good is a good will (Kant 1785).
Dancy writes that particularists agree with Kant that moral judgments are synthetic a priori.
It should be clear that Leibniz's definition of what is necessary will be adopted by Kant, but Kant will call this analytic.
A discipline known as the Kant Philologie, concerned with the history, development, and works of Kant, preempted a considerable portion of philosophical historiography after 1860.
Fichte’s name and preface were accidentally omitted from the first edition, and the work was ascribed by its earliest readers to Kant himself; when Kant corrected the mistake while commending the essay, Fichte’s reputation was made.
Their goal was not to go “back to Kant”, as Otto Liebmann (1840–1912) famously urged philosophers to do in his Kant und die Epigonen (Liebmann 1865), but, rather, to move forward beyond Kant building on his original views.
However, the Kant who influenced Herder in this way was the pre-critical Kant of the early and middle 1760s, not the critical Kant (against whom Herder later engaged in the—rather distracting and ineffective—public polemics of the Metacritique and the Calligone).
causation: the metaphysics of | Hume, David | Hume, David: Newtonianism and Anti-Newtonianism | Kant, Immanuel | Kant, Immanuel: critique of metaphysics | laws of nature | Newton, Isaac: Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica | Newton, Isaac: views on space, time, and motion
Hume, David: on religion | justice: as a virtue | Kant, Immanuel: moral philosophy | Kant, Immanuel: philosophical development | Kant, Immanuel: philosophy of religion | Kant, Immanuel: social and political philosophy | Scottish Philosophy: in the 18th Century
aesthetics: aesthetic judgment | Kant, Immanuel | Kant, Immanuel: critique of metaphysics | Kant, Immanuel: philosophical development | Kant, Immanuel: philosophy of science | Kant, Immanuel: theory of judgment | teleology: teleological notions in biology
Kant, Immanuel | Kant, Immanuel: philosophy of mathematics | Kant, Immanuel: view of mind and consciousness of self | Kant, Immanuel: views on space and time | Kant: transcendental idealism | mental content: nonconceptual | perception: experience and justification | perception: the contents of
aesthetics: German, in the 18th century | Continental Rationalism | German Philosophy: in the 18th century, prior to Kant | intrinsic vs. extrinsic properties | Kant, Immanuel: and Leibniz | Kant, Immanuel: critique of metaphysics | Kant, Immanuel: philosophy of science | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: ethics | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: on causation | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: on the problem of evil | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: philosophy of mind | mathematics: inconsistent | Mendelssohn, Moses | rationalism vs. empiricism
autonomy: in moral and political philosophy | Kant, Immanuel: aesthetics and teleology | Kant, Immanuel: and Hume on causality | Kant, Immanuel: and Hume on morality | Kant, Immanuel: and Leibniz | Kant, Immanuel: critique of metaphysics | Kant, Immanuel: moral philosophy | Kant, Immanuel: philosophy of mathematics | Kant, Immanuel: philosophy of religion | Kant, Immanuel: philosophy of science | Kant, Immanuel: social and political philosophy | morality: and practical reason | moral motivation | practical reason | practical reason: and the structure of actions | rationalism vs. empiricism | reasoning: moral | reasons for action: agent-neutral vs. agent-relative | reasons for action: internal vs. external
aesthetics: German, in the 18th century | categories | Fichte, Johann Gottlieb | Kant, Immanuel: account of reason | Kant, Immanuel: aesthetics and teleology | Kant, Immanuel: and Hume on causality | Kant, Immanuel: and Hume on morality | Kant, Immanuel: and Leibniz | Kant, Immanuel: critique of metaphysics | Kant, Immanuel: moral philosophy | Kant, Immanuel: philosophical development | Kant, Immanuel: philosophy of mathematics | Kant, Immanuel: philosophy of religion | Kant, Immanuel: philosophy of science | Kant, Immanuel: social and political philosophy | Kant, Immanuel: theory of judgment | Kant, Immanuel: transcendental arguments | Kant, Immanuel: view of mind and consciousness of self | Kant, Immanuel: views on space and time | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm | metaphysics | Reinhold, Karl Leonhard | Wolff, Christian
Kant
noun person
- influential German idealist philosopher (1724-1804)
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aesthetics German in the 18th century | categories | Fichte Johann Gottlieb | Kant Immanuel account of reason | Kant Immanuel aesthetics and teleology | Kant Immanuel and Hume on causality | Kant Immanuel and Hume on morality | Kant Immanuel and Leibniz | Kant Immanuel critique of metaphysics | Kant Immanuel moral philosophy | Kant Immanuel philosophical development | Kant Immanuel philosophy of mathematics | Kant Immanuel philosophy of religion | Kant Immanuel philosophy of science | Kant Immanuel social and political philosophy | Kant Immanuel theory of judgment | Kant Immanuel transcendental arguments | Kant Immanuel view of mind and consciousness of self | Kant Immanuel views on space and time | Leibniz Gottfried Wilhelm | metaphysics |