The Cambridge Kant lexicon:
"Already within his own lifetime, Immanuel Kant achieved renown as one of the leading philosophers of all time. Just as quickly, however, his philosophy gained notoriety as one of the most difficult to understand. Even Kant's contemporary and friend, the great German rationalist philosophe...
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Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY, USA ; Port Melbourne, Australia ; New Delhi, India ; Singapore
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2021
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Zusammenfassung: | "Already within his own lifetime, Immanuel Kant achieved renown as one of the leading philosophers of all time. Just as quickly, however, his philosophy gained notoriety as one of the most difficult to understand. Even Kant's contemporary and friend, the great German rationalist philosopher Moses Mendelssohn, complained in a letter to Kant about the "nerve-juice-consuming" (Nervensaftverzehrende) nature of Kant's philosophy (C, 10:308 [April 10, 1783]/CEC:190). One problem is the highly technical terminology in Kant's philosophy. Another is the highly systematic nature of Kant's philosophy, combined with its sheer size: individual parts of Kant's philosophy, including its words, doctrines, and works, are interconnected in a vast systematic whole spanning his recorded thought from across four decades, so that the meaning of these individual parts often remains obscure when considered in isolation. With such interpretive obstacles in the path of Kant's readers, it was not long before Kant lexicons appeared, in both German and English"-- |
Beschreibung: | Literaturverzeichnis Seite 791-797 |
Beschreibung: | XXXIV, 803 Seiten |
ISBN: | 9780521195966 |
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520 | 3 | |a "Already within his own lifetime, Immanuel Kant achieved renown as one of the leading philosophers of all time. Just as quickly, however, his philosophy gained notoriety as one of the most difficult to understand. Even Kant's contemporary and friend, the great German rationalist philosopher Moses Mendelssohn, complained in a letter to Kant about the "nerve-juice-consuming" (Nervensaftverzehrende) nature of Kant's philosophy (C, 10:308 [April 10, 1783]/CEC:190). One problem is the highly technical terminology in Kant's philosophy. Another is the highly systematic nature of Kant's philosophy, combined with its sheer size: individual parts of Kant's philosophy, including its words, doctrines, and works, are interconnected in a vast systematic whole spanning his recorded thought from across four decades, so that the meaning of these individual parts often remains obscure when considered in isolation. With such interpretive obstacles in the path of Kant's readers, it was not long before Kant lexicons appeared, in both German and English"-- | |
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Contents List of Contributors Preface Acknowledgements Lists ofAbbreviations ■ page xviii xxiii xxv xxvi PARTI KANT'S PHILOSOPHICAL CONCEPTS A A posteriori A priori Abstraction Accident Acquaintance Aesthetic Aesthetic idea Affect Agreeable Amphiboly Analogies of experience Analysis Analytic and synthetic judgments Analytic and synthetic method Anthropology Anticipations of perception Antinomy Apathy Apodictic Appearance Apperception Apprehension Architectonic Arrogance Art Assertorie Autocracy, autocratic Autonomy Axioms В Beautiful vii i 3 3 6 7 9 11 13 15 16 17 20 23 24 27 31 34 36 38 38 40 42 46 47 49 5o 31 52 34 38 39
VIII Belief or faith Body C Canon of pure reason Categorical imperative Categories Causality Cause Character Cognition Common sense Community Comparison Concept Conscience Conscientiousness Consciousness Contempt Copemican revolution Cosmology Cosmopolitan Cosmopolitan right Courage Critique D Deduction Democracy Desire Despotism Determination Determining judgment Dignity Discipline Discipline of pure reason Discursive Disposition Doctrine Dogmatism Duties to others Duties to self Duty E Effect End Enlightenment / Contents 61 63 65 67 94 98 101 102 105 109 no 114 115 118 121 122 123 125 127 132 13 4 136 137 138 140 140 143 145 146 148 149 152 155 156 157 158 159 162 165 166 166 168
Contents / IX Ens realìssimum Enthusiasm Epigenesis Essence Evil Evolution Existence Experience F Faculty Fanaticism Feeling Force Form Freedom G Generation Genius Geography God Gratitude Ground H Habit Happiness Heart Heautonomy Heteronomy Highest good History Hope Humanity Hylozoism I Idea Ideal Identity Illusion Image Imagination Immanent Immortality Imperfect duties Impression Incentive 170 I7I 17З 174 176 179 181 183 186 186 187 190 192 194 197 199 200 202 204 205 206 208 210 211 2I4 2I5 2I7 220 222 223 224 227 229 232 234 235 239 240 24I 243 244
x / Contents Inclination Inference Inner sense Instinct Intellectus archetypus lntellectus ectypus Intelligence Intelligible Interest Intuition Intuitive 245 246 247 249 250 251 252 253 254 256 258 J Judgment: power of Judgment of taste Justice К Kingdom of ends Knowledge L Language Life Logic Love M Magnitude Major premise Manifold Mathematics Matter Mechanism Metaphysical deduction Metaphysics Minor premise Modality Morality Motive N Natural aptitude Necessity Noumenon О Object Obligation Obscure representations 259 263 266 269 270 273 276 278 280 280 284 286 287 290 292 293 295 2 99 2 99 303 3°3 3°5 307 3°9 311 3*4 316
Contents / XI Ontology Opinion Organism Outer sense P Pathological Pedagogy Perception Perfect duties Personality Physical influx Pleasure Pneumatology Possibility Postulates of empirical thinking in general Postulates of pure practical reason Power Practical Practical reason Predicate Prejudice Premise Problematic Propaedeutic Propensity Purposiveness R Race Realism Reality Reason Receptivity Reflection Reflective judgment Refutation of idealism Regress Regulative Relation Representation Republic Respect Right of nations (or right of states) Rights S Schema 318 319 320 322 324 325 326 328 ЭЗ2 333 335 335 336 337 339 342 344 345 345 346 347 347 350 35° 353 354 357 358 361 372 374 378 380 382 384 386 388 390 392 394 396 397
XII / Contents Self-conceit Sensation Servility Skepticism Sociability Sovereign Space Spirit State Sublime Subreption Substance Substantial Suicide Superstition Sympathy Synthesis Synthetic a priori System T Table of categories Table of judgments Table of principles Taste Teleological judgment Teleology Temperament Theology Thing in itself Thinking Time Transcendent Transcendental Transcendental aesthetic Transcendental analytic Transcendental deduction Transcendental deduction of the categories Transcendental dialectic Transcendental doctrine of method Transcendental idealism Transcendental logic Transcendental method Truth Typie Tyrant 400 401 403 4°4 4°7 408 409 411 412 414 417 418 425 425 426 427 429 43 2 434 436 438 442 445 447 448 451 45 2 454 457 460 463 464 468 470 473 476 481 485 487 493 495 497 499 S00
Contents / XIII U Understanding V Virtue W Wille Willkür Wisdom Wish PART II KANT'S COLLECTED WORKS Kant’s Published Writings 1749 Thoughts on the True Estimation ofLiving Forces and Assessment ofthe Demonstrations that Leibniz and Other Scholars ofMechanics Have Made Use ofin This Controversial Subject, Together with Some Prefatory Considerations Pertaining to the Force ofBodies inGeneral 1754 ։ “Examination of the Question Whether the Rotation of the Earth on Its Axis by Which It Brings About the Alternation of Day and Night Has Undergone Any Change Since Its Origin and How One Can Be Certain of This, Which [Question] Was Set by the Royal Academy of Sciences in Berlin as the Prize Question for the Current Year” “The Question, Whether the Earth is Ageing, Considered from a Physical Point of View” 1755 Universal Natural History and Theory ofthe Heavens or Essay on the Constitution and the Mechanical Origin ofthe Whole Universe According to Newtonian Principles “Succinct Exposition of Some Meditations on Fire” “A New Elucidation of the First Principles of Metaphysical Cognition” 1756 “On the Causes of Earthquakes on the Occasion of the Calamity that Befell the Western Countries of Europe towards the End of Last Year” “History and Natural Description of the Most Noteworthy Occurrences of the Earthquake that Struck a Large Part of the Earth at the End of the Year 1755” “Continued Observations on the Earthquakes that Have Been Experienced for Some Time” The Employment in Natural Philosophy ofMetaphysics Combined with Geometry, ofwhich Sample I Contains the Physical Monadology
“New Notes to Explain the Theory of the Winds, in Which, at the Same Time, He Invites Attendance at His Lectures” 501 504 5o8 5і 2 5i5 516 517 519 5*9 519 522 522 523 524 524 527 528 531 531 532 533 534 537
XIV / Contents 538 1757 “Plan and Announcement of a Series of Lectures on Physical Geography, with an Appendix Containing a Brief Consideration of the Question: Whether the West Winds in Our Regions Are Moist Because They Travel over a Great Sea” 538 j758 539 “New Doctrine of Motion and Rest and the Conclusions Associated with It in the Fundamental Principles of Natural Science While at the Same Time His Lectures for This Half-Year Are Announced” 539 1759 540 “An Attempt at Some Reflections on Optimism by M. Immanuel Kant, Also Containing an Announcement of His Lectures for the Coming Semester 7 October 1759” 1760 “Thoughts on the Premature Demise of Herr Johann Friedrich Funk, in an Epistle to his Mother” 1762 The False Subtlety ofthe Four Syllogistic Figures Demonstrated by M. Immanuel Kant J763 The Only Possible Argument in Support ofa Demonstration ofthe Existence of God Attempt to Introduce the Concept ofNegative Magnitudes into Philosophy by M. Immanuel Kant 1764 Observations on the Feeling ofthe Beautiful and Sublime Essay on the Maladies ofthe Head Inquiry Concerning the Distinctness ofthe Principles ofNatural Theology and Morality, Being an Answer to the Question Proposed for Consideration by the Berlin Royal Academy ofSciencesfor the Year губу “Review of Silberschlag’s Work: Theory of the Fireball That Appeared on 2 3 July 1762” 1765 “M. Immanuel Kant’s Announcement of the Programme of His Lectures for the Winter Semester 1765-1766” Remarks in the Observations on the Feeling ofthe Beautiful and Sublime 1766 Dreams ofa Spirit-Seer Elucidated by Dreams ofMetaphysics
1768 Concerning the Ultimate Ground ofthe Differentiation ofDirections in Space 1770 On the Form and Principles ofthe Sensible and the Intelligible World 540 542 542 543 543 545 545 549 550 550 554 555 560 560 560 562 567 į6j 570 570 573 573
Contents / XV 1771 “Review of Moscati’s Work Ofthe Corporeal Essential Differences 57Ճ between the Structure ofAnimals and Humans” 576 1775 577 577 Ofthe Different Races ofHuman Beings 1776 “Essays Regarding the Philanthropinum” 1781 Critique ofPure Reason 1782 “A Note to Physicians” 1783 Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics That Will Be Able to Come Forward as Science “Review of Schulz’s Attempt at an Introduction to a Doctrine ofMoralsfor All Human Beings Regardless ofDifferent Religions” 1784 “An Answer to the Question: What is Enlightenment?” Ideafor a Universal History with a Cosmopolitan Aim 1785 “On the Volcanoes on the Moon” “On the Wrongfulness of Unauthorized Publication of Books” “Review ofJohann Gottfried Herder’s Ideasfor the Philosophy ofthe History ofHumanity. Parts 1 and 2” Determination ofthe Concept ofa Human Race Groundwork ofthe Metaphysics ofMorals 1786 Metaphysical Foundations ofNatural Science “Review of Gottlieb Hufeland’s Essay on the Principle ofNatural Right” Conjectural Beginning ofHuman History “Some Remarks on Ludwig Heinrich Jakob’s Examination ofMendebsohn’s Morning Hours” On the Philosopher's Medicine ofthe Body “What Does It Mean to Orient Oneself in Thinking? ” 1787 Critique ofPure Reason, second edition 1788 Critique ofPractical Reason On the Use of Teleological Principles in Philosophy 1790 Critique ofthe Power ofJudgment On a Discovery Whereby Any New Critique ofPure Reason Is to Be Made Superfluous by an Older One “Letter to Borowski on Fanaticism” 579 579 580 580 602 602 Ճ02 602 608 610 610 611 613 613 614 615 616 617 627 627 632 633
635 636 638 640 640 640 640 6 50 651 55r 659 66о
XVI / Contents 1791 On the Miscarriage ofall Philosophical Trials in Theodicy 1792 “Public Declaration Concerning Fichte’s An Attempt at a Critique ofAll Revelation” 1793 Religion within the Boundaries ofMere Reason “On the Common Saying: That May Be Correct in Theory, but It Is of No Use in Practice” What Real Progress Has Metaphysics Made in Germany since the Time ofLeibniz and Woljf? 1794 The End ofAll Things “Something Concerning the Influence of the Moon on the Weather” 1795 Toward Perpetual Peace 1796 “From Soemmerring’s On the Organ ofthe SouP’ “On a Recently Prominent Tone of Superiority in Philosophy” “Proclamation of the Imminent Conclusion of a Treaty of Perpetual Peace in Philosophy” “Settlement of a Mathematical Dispute Founded on Misunderstanding” 1797 The Metaphysics ofMorak “On a Supposed Right to Lie from Philanthropy” 1798 The Conflict ofthe Faculties Anthropology from a Pragmatic Point of View “On Turning out Books: Two Letters to Mr. Friedrich Nicolai from Immanuel Kant” 1799 “Public Declaration Concerning Fichte’s Wissenschaftslehre” 1800 Jăsche Logic “Postscript to Christian Gottlieb Mielcke’s Lithuanian-German and German-Lithuanian Dictionary” “Preface to Reinhold Bernhard Jachmann’s Examination ofthe Kantian Philosophy ofReligion” 1802 Physical Geography 1803 Lectures on Pedagogy 1936, 1938 (posthumous publication) Opus postumum 661 661 662 662 663 66 3 666 668 670 670 672 673 673 675 675 676 678 679 680 680 691 695 695 699 704 705 705 707 707 7x1 712 713 713 716 716 721 721
Contents / XVII Reflections Reflections on Anthropology Reflections on Ethics Reflections on Metaphysics Reflections on Philosophy of Right Reflections on Physics and Chemistry Reflections on Theology Lectures Lectures on Anthropology Lectures on Ethics Lectures on Geography Lectures on Mathematics Lectures on Metaphysics Lectures on Natural Right Lectures on Philosophical Encyclopedia Lectures on Physics Lectures on Theology Bibliography Index 728 728 73 6 741 746 749 751 756 756 760 766 769 770 778 781 785 787 791 798 |
adam_txt |
Contents List of Contributors Preface Acknowledgements Lists ofAbbreviations ■ page xviii xxiii xxv xxvi PARTI KANT'S PHILOSOPHICAL CONCEPTS A A posteriori A priori Abstraction Accident Acquaintance Aesthetic Aesthetic idea Affect Agreeable Amphiboly Analogies of experience Analysis Analytic and synthetic judgments Analytic and synthetic method Anthropology Anticipations of perception Antinomy Apathy Apodictic Appearance Apperception Apprehension Architectonic Arrogance Art Assertorie Autocracy, autocratic Autonomy Axioms В Beautiful vii i 3 3 6 7 9 11 13 15 16 17 20 23 24 27 31 34 36 38 38 40 42 46 47 49 5o 31 52 34 38 39
VIII Belief or faith Body C Canon of pure reason Categorical imperative Categories Causality Cause Character Cognition Common sense Community Comparison Concept Conscience Conscientiousness Consciousness Contempt Copemican revolution Cosmology Cosmopolitan Cosmopolitan right Courage Critique D Deduction Democracy Desire Despotism Determination Determining judgment Dignity Discipline Discipline of pure reason Discursive Disposition Doctrine Dogmatism Duties to others Duties to self Duty E Effect End Enlightenment / Contents 61 63 65 67 94 98 101 102 105 109 no 114 115 118 121 122 123 125 127 132 13 4 136 137 138 140 140 143 145 146 148 149 152 155 156 157 158 159 162 165 166 166 168
Contents / IX Ens realìssimum Enthusiasm Epigenesis Essence Evil Evolution Existence Experience F Faculty Fanaticism Feeling Force Form Freedom G Generation Genius Geography God Gratitude Ground H Habit Happiness Heart Heautonomy Heteronomy Highest good History Hope Humanity Hylozoism I Idea Ideal Identity Illusion Image Imagination Immanent Immortality Imperfect duties Impression Incentive 170 I7I 17З 174 176 179 181 183 186 186 187 190 192 194 197 199 200 202 204 205 206 208 210 211 2I4 2I5 2I7 220 222 223 224 227 229 232 234 235 239 240 24I 243 244
x / Contents Inclination Inference Inner sense Instinct Intellectus archetypus lntellectus ectypus Intelligence Intelligible Interest Intuition Intuitive 245 246 247 249 250 251 252 253 254 256 258 J Judgment: power of Judgment of taste Justice К Kingdom of ends Knowledge L Language Life Logic Love M Magnitude Major premise Manifold Mathematics Matter Mechanism Metaphysical deduction Metaphysics Minor premise Modality Morality Motive N Natural aptitude Necessity Noumenon О Object Obligation Obscure representations 259 263 266 269 270 273 276 278 280 280 284 286 287 290 292 293 295 2 99 2 99 303 3°3 3°5 307 3°9 311 3*4 316
Contents / XI Ontology Opinion Organism Outer sense P Pathological Pedagogy Perception Perfect duties Personality Physical influx Pleasure Pneumatology Possibility Postulates of empirical thinking in general Postulates of pure practical reason Power Practical Practical reason Predicate Prejudice Premise Problematic Propaedeutic Propensity Purposiveness R Race Realism Reality Reason Receptivity Reflection Reflective judgment Refutation of idealism Regress Regulative Relation Representation Republic Respect Right of nations (or right of states) Rights S Schema 318 319 320 322 324 325 326 328 ЭЗ2 333 335 335 336 337 339 342 344 345 345 346 347 347 350 35° 353 354 357 358 361 372 374 378 380 382 384 386 388 390 392 394 396 397
XII / Contents Self-conceit Sensation Servility Skepticism Sociability Sovereign Space Spirit State Sublime Subreption Substance Substantial Suicide Superstition Sympathy Synthesis Synthetic a priori System T Table of categories Table of judgments Table of principles Taste Teleological judgment Teleology Temperament Theology Thing in itself Thinking Time Transcendent Transcendental Transcendental aesthetic Transcendental analytic Transcendental deduction Transcendental deduction of the categories Transcendental dialectic Transcendental doctrine of method Transcendental idealism Transcendental logic Transcendental method Truth Typie Tyrant 400 401 403 4°4 4°7 408 409 411 412 414 417 418 425 425 426 427 429 43 2 434 436 438 442 445 447 448 451 45 2 454 457 460 463 464 468 470 473 476 481 485 487 493 495 497 499 S00
Contents / XIII U Understanding V Virtue W Wille Willkür Wisdom Wish PART II KANT'S COLLECTED WORKS Kant’s Published Writings 1749 Thoughts on the True Estimation ofLiving Forces and Assessment ofthe Demonstrations that Leibniz and Other Scholars ofMechanics Have Made Use ofin This Controversial Subject, Together with Some Prefatory Considerations Pertaining to the Force ofBodies inGeneral 1754 ։ “Examination of the Question Whether the Rotation of the Earth on Its Axis by Which It Brings About the Alternation of Day and Night Has Undergone Any Change Since Its Origin and How One Can Be Certain of This, Which [Question] Was Set by the Royal Academy of Sciences in Berlin as the Prize Question for the Current Year” “The Question, Whether the Earth is Ageing, Considered from a Physical Point of View” 1755 Universal Natural History and Theory ofthe Heavens or Essay on the Constitution and the Mechanical Origin ofthe Whole Universe According to Newtonian Principles “Succinct Exposition of Some Meditations on Fire” “A New Elucidation of the First Principles of Metaphysical Cognition” 1756 “On the Causes of Earthquakes on the Occasion of the Calamity that Befell the Western Countries of Europe towards the End of Last Year” “History and Natural Description of the Most Noteworthy Occurrences of the Earthquake that Struck a Large Part of the Earth at the End of the Year 1755” “Continued Observations on the Earthquakes that Have Been Experienced for Some Time” The Employment in Natural Philosophy ofMetaphysics Combined with Geometry, ofwhich Sample I Contains the Physical Monadology
“New Notes to Explain the Theory of the Winds, in Which, at the Same Time, He Invites Attendance at His Lectures” 501 504 5o8 5і 2 5i5 516 517 519 5*9 519 522 522 523 524 524 527 528 531 531 532 533 534 537
XIV / Contents 538 1757 “Plan and Announcement of a Series of Lectures on Physical Geography, with an Appendix Containing a Brief Consideration of the Question: Whether the West Winds in Our Regions Are Moist Because They Travel over a Great Sea” 538 j758 539 “New Doctrine of Motion and Rest and the Conclusions Associated with It in the Fundamental Principles of Natural Science While at the Same Time His Lectures for This Half-Year Are Announced” 539 1759 540 “An Attempt at Some Reflections on Optimism by M. Immanuel Kant, Also Containing an Announcement of His Lectures for the Coming Semester 7 October 1759” 1760 “Thoughts on the Premature Demise of Herr Johann Friedrich Funk, in an Epistle to his Mother” 1762 The False Subtlety ofthe Four Syllogistic Figures Demonstrated by M. Immanuel Kant J763 The Only Possible Argument in Support ofa Demonstration ofthe Existence of God Attempt to Introduce the Concept ofNegative Magnitudes into Philosophy by M. Immanuel Kant 1764 Observations on the Feeling ofthe Beautiful and Sublime Essay on the Maladies ofthe Head Inquiry Concerning the Distinctness ofthe Principles ofNatural Theology and Morality, Being an Answer to the Question Proposed for Consideration by the Berlin Royal Academy ofSciencesfor the Year губу “Review of Silberschlag’s Work: Theory of the Fireball That Appeared on 2 3 July 1762” 1765 “M. Immanuel Kant’s Announcement of the Programme of His Lectures for the Winter Semester 1765-1766” Remarks in the Observations on the Feeling ofthe Beautiful and Sublime 1766 Dreams ofa Spirit-Seer Elucidated by Dreams ofMetaphysics
1768 Concerning the Ultimate Ground ofthe Differentiation ofDirections in Space 1770 On the Form and Principles ofthe Sensible and the Intelligible World 540 542 542 543 543 545 545 549 550 550 554 555 560 560 560 562 567 į6j 570 570 573 573
Contents / XV 1771 “Review of Moscati’s Work Ofthe Corporeal Essential Differences 57Ճ between the Structure ofAnimals and Humans” 576 1775 577 577 Ofthe Different Races ofHuman Beings 1776 “Essays Regarding the Philanthropinum” 1781 Critique ofPure Reason 1782 “A Note to Physicians” 1783 Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics That Will Be Able to Come Forward as Science “Review of Schulz’s Attempt at an Introduction to a Doctrine ofMoralsfor All Human Beings Regardless ofDifferent Religions” 1784 “An Answer to the Question: What is Enlightenment?” Ideafor a Universal History with a Cosmopolitan Aim 1785 “On the Volcanoes on the Moon” “On the Wrongfulness of Unauthorized Publication of Books” “Review ofJohann Gottfried Herder’s Ideasfor the Philosophy ofthe History ofHumanity. Parts 1 and 2” Determination ofthe Concept ofa Human Race Groundwork ofthe Metaphysics ofMorals 1786 Metaphysical Foundations ofNatural Science “Review of Gottlieb Hufeland’s Essay on the Principle ofNatural Right” Conjectural Beginning ofHuman History “Some Remarks on Ludwig Heinrich Jakob’s Examination ofMendebsohn’s Morning Hours” On the Philosopher's Medicine ofthe Body “What Does It Mean to Orient Oneself in Thinking? ” 1787 Critique ofPure Reason, second edition 1788 Critique ofPractical Reason On the Use of Teleological Principles in Philosophy 1790 Critique ofthe Power ofJudgment On a Discovery Whereby Any New Critique ofPure Reason Is to Be Made Superfluous by an Older One “Letter to Borowski on Fanaticism” 579 579 580 580 602 602 Ճ02 602 608 610 610 611 613 613 614 615 616 617 627 627 632 633
635 636 638 640 640 640 640 6 50 651 55r 659 66о
XVI / Contents 1791 On the Miscarriage ofall Philosophical Trials in Theodicy 1792 “Public Declaration Concerning Fichte’s An Attempt at a Critique ofAll Revelation” 1793 Religion within the Boundaries ofMere Reason “On the Common Saying: That May Be Correct in Theory, but It Is of No Use in Practice” What Real Progress Has Metaphysics Made in Germany since the Time ofLeibniz and Woljf? 1794 The End ofAll Things “Something Concerning the Influence of the Moon on the Weather” 1795 Toward Perpetual Peace 1796 “From Soemmerring’s On the Organ ofthe SouP’ “On a Recently Prominent Tone of Superiority in Philosophy” “Proclamation of the Imminent Conclusion of a Treaty of Perpetual Peace in Philosophy” “Settlement of a Mathematical Dispute Founded on Misunderstanding” 1797 The Metaphysics ofMorak “On a Supposed Right to Lie from Philanthropy” 1798 The Conflict ofthe Faculties Anthropology from a Pragmatic Point of View “On Turning out Books: Two Letters to Mr. Friedrich Nicolai from Immanuel Kant” 1799 “Public Declaration Concerning Fichte’s Wissenschaftslehre” 1800 Jăsche Logic “Postscript to Christian Gottlieb Mielcke’s Lithuanian-German and German-Lithuanian Dictionary” “Preface to Reinhold Bernhard Jachmann’s Examination ofthe Kantian Philosophy ofReligion” 1802 Physical Geography 1803 Lectures on Pedagogy 1936, 1938 (posthumous publication) Opus postumum 661 661 662 662 663 66 3 666 668 670 670 672 673 673 675 675 676 678 679 680 680 691 695 695 699 704 705 705 707 707 7x1 712 713 713 716 716 721 721
Contents / XVII Reflections Reflections on Anthropology Reflections on Ethics Reflections on Metaphysics Reflections on Philosophy of Right Reflections on Physics and Chemistry Reflections on Theology Lectures Lectures on Anthropology Lectures on Ethics Lectures on Geography Lectures on Mathematics Lectures on Metaphysics Lectures on Natural Right Lectures on Philosophical Encyclopedia Lectures on Physics Lectures on Theology Bibliography Index 728 728 73 6 741 746 749 751 756 756 760 766 769 770 778 781 785 787 791 798 |
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Just as quickly, however, his philosophy gained notoriety as one of the most difficult to understand. Even Kant's contemporary and friend, the great German rationalist philosopher Moses Mendelssohn, complained in a letter to Kant about the "nerve-juice-consuming" (Nervensaftverzehrende) nature of Kant's philosophy (C, 10:308 [April 10, 1783]/CEC:190). One problem is the highly technical terminology in Kant's philosophy. Another is the highly systematic nature of Kant's philosophy, combined with its sheer size: individual parts of Kant's philosophy, including its words, doctrines, and works, are interconnected in a vast systematic whole spanning his recorded thought from across four decades, so that the meaning of these individual parts often remains obscure when considered in isolation. 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genre | (DE-588)4066724-8 Wörterbuch gnd-content |
genre_facet | Wörterbuch |
id | DE-604.BV047213888 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T16:55:15Z |
indexdate | 2025-01-31T17:13:58Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780521195966 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-032618650 |
oclc_num | 1249440722 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-20 DE-12 DE-M468 |
owner_facet | DE-20 DE-12 DE-M468 |
physical | XXXIV, 803 Seiten |
psigel | BSB_NED_20210526 |
publishDate | 2021 |
publishDateSearch | 2021 |
publishDateSort | 2021 |
publisher | Cambridge University Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | The Cambridge Kant lexicon edited by Julian Wuerth (Vanderbilt University) Kant lexicon Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY, USA ; Port Melbourne, Australia ; New Delhi, India ; Singapore Cambridge University Press 2021 XXXIV, 803 Seiten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Literaturverzeichnis Seite 791-797 "Already within his own lifetime, Immanuel Kant achieved renown as one of the leading philosophers of all time. Just as quickly, however, his philosophy gained notoriety as one of the most difficult to understand. Even Kant's contemporary and friend, the great German rationalist philosopher Moses Mendelssohn, complained in a letter to Kant about the "nerve-juice-consuming" (Nervensaftverzehrende) nature of Kant's philosophy (C, 10:308 [April 10, 1783]/CEC:190). One problem is the highly technical terminology in Kant's philosophy. Another is the highly systematic nature of Kant's philosophy, combined with its sheer size: individual parts of Kant's philosophy, including its words, doctrines, and works, are interconnected in a vast systematic whole spanning his recorded thought from across four decades, so that the meaning of these individual parts often remains obscure when considered in isolation. With such interpretive obstacles in the path of Kant's readers, it was not long before Kant lexicons appeared, in both German and English"-- Kant, Immanuel 1724-1804 (DE-588)118559796 gnd rswk-swf Kant, Immanuel / 1724-1804 / Encyclopedias (DE-588)4066724-8 Wörterbuch gnd-content Kant, Immanuel 1724-1804 (DE-588)118559796 p DE-604 Wuerth, Julian (DE-588)1058638629 edt Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-1-00-903839-3 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-1-13-901815-9 Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032618650&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | The Cambridge Kant lexicon Kant, Immanuel 1724-1804 (DE-588)118559796 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)118559796 (DE-588)4066724-8 |
title | The Cambridge Kant lexicon |
title_alt | Kant lexicon |
title_auth | The Cambridge Kant lexicon |
title_exact_search | The Cambridge Kant lexicon |
title_exact_search_txtP | The Cambridge Kant lexicon |
title_full | The Cambridge Kant lexicon edited by Julian Wuerth (Vanderbilt University) |
title_fullStr | The Cambridge Kant lexicon edited by Julian Wuerth (Vanderbilt University) |
title_full_unstemmed | The Cambridge Kant lexicon edited by Julian Wuerth (Vanderbilt University) |
title_short | The Cambridge Kant lexicon |
title_sort | the cambridge kant lexicon |
topic | Kant, Immanuel 1724-1804 (DE-588)118559796 gnd |
topic_facet | Kant, Immanuel 1724-1804 Wörterbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032618650&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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