Features
- Cover Type: Paperback with 548 pages
- Published by: Cambridge University Press
- Edition: 1st Edition March 19, 2001
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 0521799988
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-0521799980
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Book Dimensions:
9.1 x 6.1 x 1.3 inches
- Weighs: 3.1 pounds
Product Review
"the volume, like the other texts in this series, will become a major resource for serious study of Kant by philosophers and theologians in the English-speaking world." Philip J. Rossi, S.J., Theological Studies
Product Review
"the volume, like the other texts in this series, will become a major resource for serious study of Kant by philosophers and theologians in the English-speaking world." Philip J. Rossi, S.J., Theological Studies
Reader ReviewsEvery serious scholar in Kant or Theology must owe this superb volume. It contains many unknown and important works in order to achieve a complete and accurate vision of Kant's moral theory and his philosophy of religion, as well as his whole system of philosophy, developed throughout the three Critiques. Kant himself delimited his philosophical project in the formulations of these three questions: "What can I know" --What I ought to do? and -What am I to expect? (CPR A 804/ B 832). Kant told that the last question, the theological one, was to be answer in "The religion within the limits of mere reason" of 1793 (AK 11: 414), a monumental work that makes clear several issues being somehow murky for the readers of the Groundwork and the Critique of the Pure reason, such as the value of the faith, the intelligible grounds of free will and the relation between morals and traditional religion.