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Virtues of Freedom: Selected Essays on Kant

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The essays collected in this volume by Paul Guyer, one of the world's foremost Kant scholars, explore Kant's attempt to develop a morality grounded on the intrinsic and unconditional value of the human freedom to set our own ends. When regulated by the principle that the freedom of all is equally valuable, the freedom to set our own ends — what Kant calls "humanity" - becomes what he calls autonomy. These essays explore Kant's strategies for establishing the premise that freedom is the inner worth of the world or the essential end of humankind, as he says, and for deriving the specific duties that fundamental principle of morality generates in the empirical circumstances of human existence. The Virtues of Freedom further investigates Kant's attempts to prove that we are always free to live up to this moral ideal, that is, that we have free will no matter what, as well as his more successful explorations of the ways in which our natural tendencies to be moral — dispositions to the feeling of respect and more specific feelings such as love and self-esteem — can and must be cultivated and educated. Guyer finally examines the various models of human community that Kant develops from his premise that our associations must be based on the value of freedom for all. The contrasts but also similarities of Kant's moral philosophy to that of David Hume but many of his other predecessors and contemporaries, such as Stoics and Epicureans, Pufendorf and Wolff, Hutcheson, Kames, and Smith, are also explored.

Συγγραφέας: Guyer Paul
Εκδότης: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Σελίδες: 352
ISBN: 9780198755654
Εξώφυλλο: Μαλακό Εξώφυλλο
Αριθμός Έκδοσης: 1
Έτος έκδοσης: 2017

Introduction
1: Kant, Autonomy, and Modernity
Part I: The Value of Freedom
2: Is and Ought: From Hume to Kant, and Now
3: Freedom as the Foundation of Morality: Kant's Early Efforts
4: Freedom and the Essential Ends of Humankind
5: Kantian Perfectionism
6: Setting and Pursuing Ends: Internal and External Freedom
7: Freedom, Ends, and Duties in Vigilantius
Part II: The Actuality of Freedom
8: The Proof-Structure of the Groundwork and the Role of Section III
9: Proving Ourselves Free
10: Problems with Freedom: Kant's Argument in Groundwork III and its Subsequent Emendations
11: Natural and Rational Belief: Kant's Final Words?
Part III: The Achievement of Freedom
12: A Passion for Reason: Kant and the Motivation for Morality
13: The Obligation to be Virtuous: Kant's Conception of the Tugenverpflichtung
14: Kant on Moral Feelings: From the Lectures to the Metaphysics of Morals
15: Examples of Moral Possibility
Conclusion
16: Kantian Communities

Paul Guyer is Jonathan Nelson Professor of Humanities and Philosophy at Brown University. He has been Visiting Professor at the University of Michigan, Princeton University, and Harvard University. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and his other awards include the Centennial Medal from the Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Research Prize, 2007-08.

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