Published 2013
Table of Contents
“...4 Kant's final phenomenology of autonomy; Part II The history and influence of Kant's conception of autonomy; Chapter 5 Transcending nature, unifying reason: on Kant's debt to Rousseau; 1 Kant reborn; 2 Rousseau's conundrum; 3 History, reason's self-correction, and autonomy; 4 Socrates and the science of limits; 5 Dwellings of reason; Chapter 6 Kant and the "
paradox" of autonomy; 1 Introduction; 2 Kant's initial "
paradox"; 3 Kant's moral turn; 4 The Inaugural Dissertation of 1770; 5 The "philosopher's stone": lectures of the 1770s and early 1780s; 6 The "Canon of Pure Reason"7 The "philosopher's stone" dissolved: autonomy in Groundlaying; Chapter 7 Autonomy in Kant and German Idealism; 1 Introduction; 2 Kantian autonomy and morality; 3 Autonomy and
freedom; 4 Developments and criticisms of Kant's conception of autonomy; Fichte; Schiller; Hegel; Chapter 8 Autonomy after Kant; 1 Introduction; 2 Kant's views of autonomy; 3 Emerson and Mill; 4 English-language moral philosophy; 5 Renewed interest in autonomy; 6 Reasons for the renewed interest; 7 Gerald Dworkin and Harry Frankfurt; 8 Medical ethics; 9 Feminism; 10 Political philosophy; 11 neo-Kantian ethics12 Five sources of the renewed interest; 13 Conclusion; Chapter 9 Personal autonomy and public authority; 1 Introduction; 2 Personal autonomy; 3 Collective self-legislation; 4 Kant's criterion of public legitimacy; 5 Autonomy and public authority; 6 Putting personal autonomy in its place; Part III The relevance of Kant's conception for contemporary moral philosophy; Chapter 10 Moralized nature, naturalized autonomy: Kant's way of bridging the gap in the third Critique (and in the Groundwork); 1 Posing the problem; 2 Kant's strategy in the third Critique....
”
Located
Loading...
Call Number
Loading...
Connect to electronic resource
Electronic
eBook