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Themes in Kant's Metaphysics and Ethics (Studies in Philosophy and the History of Philosophy)
 
 
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Themes in Kant's Metaphysics and Ethics (Studies in Philosophy and the History of Philosophy) [Hardcover]

Arthur Melnick (Author)

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Book Description

0813213711 978-0813213712 June 2004
Intended for those interested in Kant’s contribution to philosophy, this volume provides an overview of Kant’s arguments concerning central issues in metaphysics and ethics. Arthur Melnick argues that the key to all of Kant’s arguments is his constructivist theory of space and time. Melnick shows that Kant’s arguments for causation and for substance, as well as Kant’s refutation of Cartesian skepticism, are far more cogent than usually thought. Further, this theory distinguishes Kant’s idealism from phenomenalism, verificationism, and internal realism. For Kant, metaphysics is tied to cognition; thus one must understand his account of cognition in order to fully grasp his metaphysics. Melnick argues that for Kant, thoughts or cognitions are rules for situating oneself with regard to reality-contacting procedures. In accord with this account, Melnick defends both Kant’s conception of categories and a robust correspondence theory of truth.

The essays on ethics revolve around the notion of practical reasoning. Melnick contends that Kant is correct that such reasoning cannot be causally determined. This undercuts any compatibilist account of freedom of action as action controllable by practical reasoning. Kant’s moral theory is claimed to be a version of social-contract theory. This explains some troublesome aspects in Kant’s formulations of his categorical imperative. Melnick claims that such theories, even with Kant’s connection of them to autonomy, do not function well as motivational justifications of morality. He offers a different version of a categorical imperative that is supposed to avoid this problem.


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About the Author

Arthur Melnick is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Illinois, Urbana. A specialist in the philosophy of Kant, Melnick is the author of Kant’s Analogies of Experience, Space, Time and Thought in Kant, and Representation of the World: A Naturalized Semantics. He has also published numerous articles and book reviews.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In the Aesthetic Kant holds that space and time are given in pure intuition. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
temporizing construction, flowing construction, uncognizable reality, objective expanse, proper reacting, detectable reality, present cognizance, temporizing procedure, macroscopic definiteness, purely conceptual representation, downbeat gestures, transcendental affection, reasonable pursuit, deducing categories, macroscopic facts, intellectual cognizance, pure manifold, objective succession, undetermined choice, practical reasoning cannot, sensed relations, constructive time, ship upstream, pure synthesis, ship downstream
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
First Analogy, Metaphysical Deduction, New York, Immanuel Kant, Norman Kemp Smith, Aesthetic Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, First Antinomy, Peter Strawson, Henry Allison, Metaphysical Exposition, Harvard University Press, Oxford University Press, Inaugural Dissertation, Paul Guyer, Third Antinomy, Lewis White Beck, Mathematical Antinomies, New Haven, Clarendon Press, Kant's Copernican, Yale University Press, Cornell University Press, Creating the Kingdom of Ends, Dieter Henrich
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