Kant`s Theory of Freedom

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York Cambridge University Press 0000Description: 304pDDC classification:
  • N75.1KI AL561
Partial contents:
Part I: Freedom and rational agency in the Critique of Pure Reason 1 The Third Antinomy 11 I: Some preliminaries 11 II: The arguments 14 III: The resolution of the Third Antinomy 22 IV: The Third Antinomy and freedom of the will 25 2 Empirical and intelligible character 29 I: The distinction in general and empirical character in particular 30 II: Intelligible character 35 III: The compatibility of empirical and intelligible character 41 IV: Timeless agency and the causality of reason 47 3 Practical and transcendental freedom 54 I: Freedom in the Dialectic and the Canon 54 II: The ambiguous nature of practical freedom 59 n III: Freedom in Kant`s moral theory circa 1781 66 4 Two alternative interpretations 71 I: Beck`s critique and reconstruction 71 II: Transcendental idealism and anomalous monism 76 Part II: Moral agency and moral psychology 5 Rational agency and autonomy I: Rational agency in Groundwork 11 f II: Autonomy as a property of the will III: From property to principle 6 Duty, inclination, and respect II: Respect ¿ I: A good will and moral worth 7 Wille, Willkiir, and Gesinnung I: The Wille-Willkur distinction II: Kant`s concept of Gesinnung 8 Radical evil I: Radical evil and rigorism II: The propensity and its universality III: Degrees of radical evil 9 Virtue and holiness I: The nature of virtue II: Holiness as a moral ideal 10 The classical objections I: Schiller`s critique II: Hegel`s critique III: Williams`s critique Part III: The justification of morality and freedom 11 The Reciprocity Thesis I: The formulations of the thesis II: Freedom and practical law: a first attempt III: Freedom and practical law: completing the argument IV: From practical law to the moral law 12 The deduction in Groundwork III I: The preparatory argument II: The hidden circle III: Completing the deduction IV: The failure of the deduction 13 The fact of reason and the deduction of freedom I: The nature of the fact II: The fact as the fact of reason III: The deduction of freedom: the basic argument IV: The deduction of freedom, the Third Antinomy, and the unity of theoretical and practical reason V: The deduction of freedom: a final consideration
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books DVK Library N75.1KI AL561 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 77060148

includes index and biblioraphy

Part I: Freedom and rational agency in the Critique of Pure Reason 1 The Third Antinomy 11 I: Some preliminaries 11 II: The arguments 14 III: The resolution of the Third Antinomy 22 IV: The Third Antinomy and freedom of the will 25 2 Empirical and intelligible character 29 I: The distinction in general and empirical character in particular 30 II: Intelligible character 35 III: The compatibility of empirical and intelligible character 41 IV: Timeless agency and the causality of reason 47 3 Practical and transcendental freedom 54 I: Freedom in the Dialectic and the Canon 54 II: The ambiguous nature of practical freedom 59 n III: Freedom in Kant`s moral theory circa 1781 66 4 Two alternative interpretations 71 I: Beck`s critique and reconstruction 71 II: Transcendental idealism and anomalous monism 76 Part II: Moral agency and moral psychology 5 Rational agency and autonomy I: Rational agency in Groundwork 11 f II: Autonomy as a property of the will III: From property to principle 6 Duty, inclination, and respect II: Respect ¿ I: A good will and moral worth 7 Wille, Willkiir, and Gesinnung I: The Wille-Willkur distinction II: Kant`s concept of Gesinnung 8 Radical evil I: Radical evil and rigorism II: The propensity and its universality III: Degrees of radical evil 9 Virtue and holiness I: The nature of virtue II: Holiness as a moral ideal 10 The classical objections I: Schiller`s critique II: Hegel`s critique III: Williams`s critique Part III: The justification of morality and freedom 11 The Reciprocity Thesis I: The formulations of the thesis II: Freedom and practical law: a first attempt III: Freedom and practical law: completing the argument IV: From practical law to the moral law 12 The deduction in Groundwork III I: The preparatory argument II: The hidden circle III: Completing the deduction IV: The failure of the deduction 13 The fact of reason and the deduction of freedom I: The nature of the fact II: The fact as the fact of reason III: The deduction of freedom: the basic argument IV: The deduction of freedom, the Third Antinomy, and the unity of theoretical and practical reason V: The deduction of freedom: a final consideration

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.

Powered by Koha