000 | 01224nam a2200217 a 4500 | ||
---|---|---|---|
001 | nice12345678 | ||
003 | Monogr.mrc | ||
005 | 20200111182456.0 | ||
008 | 16-May-17s1990 Enga grp 000 0 eng | ||
020 |
_a1855060728 _c0 |
||
082 | 0 | 0 |
_aN75.1KI _bR733 |
100 | _aRoss, George Macdonald | ||
245 | _aKant and His Influence | ||
260 |
_aEngland _bThoemmes Press _c1990 |
||
300 | _a374p | ||
500 | _aincludes index and biblioraphy | ||
505 | 2 | _aHT` IMPLIES `CAN`: KANT AND IfHER, A CONTRAST er M. White fused perceptions, darkened incepts-. some features of "s leibniz-critique Iherine Wilson .UGHT AND SENSIBILITY IN IBNIZ, KANT AND BRADLEY f|y-Stock |lGINAL NONSENSE`: ART AND INIUS IN KANT`S AESTHETIC ter Lewis , BECK AND SCHELLING IN fNT`S OPUS POSTUMUM feart Forster IMAGINATION AS A CONNECTING MIDDLE IN SCHELLING`S RECONSTRUCTION OF KANT John Llewelyn THE EARLY RECEPTION OF KANT`S THOUGHT IN ENGLAND 1785-1805 Giuseppe Micheli HAMILTON`S READING OF KANT: A CHAPTER IN THE EARLY SCOTTISH RECEPTION OF KANT`S THOUGHT Manfred Kuehn ASPECTS OF KANT`S INFLUENCE ON BRITISH THEOLOGY Donald MacKinnon | |
902 | _bSLR | ||
942 | _cBK | ||
999 |
_c3101 _d3101 |