Results for 'Post-Kantian European Philosophy'

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  1. Eternity in Kant and Post-Kantian European Thought.Alistair Welchman - 2016 - In Yitzhak Melamed (ed.), Eternity: A History. Oxford, UK: pp. 179-225.
    The story of eternity is not as simple as a secularization narrative implies. Instead it follows something like the trajectory of reversal in Kant’s practical proof for the existence of god. In that proof, god emerges not as an object of theoretical investigation, but as a postulate required by our practical engagement with the world; so, similarly, the eternal is not just secularized out of existence, but becomes understood as an entailment of, and somehow imbricated in, the conditions of our (...)
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  2. Going beyond the Kantian philosophy: On McDowell's Hegelian critique of Kant.Robert Stern - 1999 - European Journal of Philosophy 7 (2):247–269.
    The Kant-Hegel relation has a continuing fascination for commentators on Hegel, and understandably so: for, taking this route into the Hegelian jungle can promise many advantages. First, it can set Hegel’s thought against a background with which we are fairly familiar, and in a way that makes its relevance clearly apparent; second, it can help us locate Hegel in the broader philosophical tradition, making us see that the traditional ‘analytic’ jump from Kant to Frege leaves out a crucial period in (...)
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  3. Post-Kantian Idealism and Self-Transformation.G. Anthony Bruno - 2023 - In G. Anthony Bruno & Justin Vlasits (eds.), Transformation and the History of Philosophy. New York, NY: Routledge.
    While the idea that philosophy requires self-transformation is historically pervasive, it exerts considerable influence on the post-Kantians who first aim to systematize Kant’s idealism by grounding it on a first principle. In the 1790s, Fichte and Schelling offer competing accounts of the self-transformation that they regard as essential to positing a first principle. Their accounts raise two central questions. First, what makes this kind of self-transformation possible? Second, are there different possible expressions of philosophical self-transformation? In what follows, (...)
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  4. Spirituality and Philosophy in Post-Structuralist Theory.Ian Hunter - 2009 - History of European Ideas 35 (1):265-275.
    This paper discusses the role of a particular form of philosophical spirituality in the emergence of post-structuralist theory. Initially elaborated in the post-Kantian metaphysics of Husserl and Heidegger, and focused in recondite acts of intellectual self-transformation, this form of spirituality was transposed into a literary hermeneutics that permitted its wider dissemination in the Anglo-american humanities academy. Post-structuralist theory is the result of this historical transformation.
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  5.  20
    The Fifth Antinomy: A Reading of Torture for a Post-Kantian Moral Philosophy.Roy Ben-Shai - 2016 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 24 (3):17-37.
    "Where is it decreed that enlightenment must be free of emotion? To me, the opposite seems to be true. Enlightenment can properly fulfill its task only if it sets to work with passion." - Améry, At the Mind's Limits This statement, which concludes the preface to the 1977 reissue of At the Mind’s Limits, conveys the philosophical ambition of the book: to advance the enlightenment project, while revising the way we understand this project. The idea, rejected here by Améry, that (...)
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  6. The post-Kantian turning-point as the culmination of transcendental philosophy.Jc Horn - 1995 - Filosoficky Casopis 43 (3):400-420.
  7.  34
    Post-Enlightenment sources of political authority: Biblical atheism, political theology and the Schmitt–Strauss exchange.John P. McCormick - 2011 - History of European Ideas 37 (2):175-180.
    This essay reevaluates the Weimar writings of Carl Schmitt and Leo Strauss, specifically, their intellectual efforts to replace the political authority of Kantian liberalism with, respectively, a ‘political theology’ and ‘Biblical atheism’ derived from the thought of early-modern state theorists like Hobbes and Spinoza. Schmitt and Strauss each insisted that post-Kantian Enlightenment rationality was unraveling into a way of thinking that violently rejected ‘form’ of any kind, fixated myopically on material things and lacked any conception of the (...)
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  8. Phantom of consistency: Alain Badiou and Kantian transcendental idealism.Adrian Johnston - 2008 - Continental Philosophy Review 41 (3):345-366.
    Immanuel Kant is one of Alain Badiou’s principle philosophical enemies. Kant’s critical philosophy is anathema to Badiou not only because of the latter’s openly aired hatred of the motif of finitude so omnipresent in post-Kantian European intellectual traditions—Badiou blames Kant for inventing this motif—but also because of its idealism. For Badiou-the-materialist, as for any serious philosophical materialist writing in Kant’s wake, transcendental idealism must be dismantled and overcome. In his most recent works, Badiou attempts to invent (...)
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  9. The Superfluous Revolution: Post-Kantian Philosophy and the Nature of Religious Excess.Michael Morris - 2015 - Intellectual History Review 26 (2):263-283.
    Despite our common self-conceptions, we philosophers have our myths, heroes, and guiding narratives. Our work may emphasize conceptual clarity and deductive arguments, but these more sober and discursive elements of our work always occurs within the context of a broader, often implicit, and frequently illusive orientation, within the scope of some particular vision of our vocation, our history, and our place within the contemporary world. These visions are meta-philosophical: they precede and frame philosophical work, and they engender the most intractable (...)
     
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  10.  36
    Richard Rorty’s ‘Post-KantianPhilosophy of History.Loren Goldman - 2015 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 9 (3):410-443.
    _ Source: _Volume 9, Issue 3, pp 410 - 443 This article contends that despite Richard Rorty’s famous rejection of metaphysics, his work nonetheless offers a philosophy of history, and that his account mirrors that of Kant’s, a figure Rorty considered one of his primary conceptual adversaries. Although Rorty often presents his approach to history as a foil to Kant’s, his account has striking parallels to the latter’s regulative meliorism. In similar fashion, far from being a blind optimist, Kant (...)
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  11.  1
    The superfluous revolution: post-Kantian philosophy and the nature of religious excess.Michael Morris - 2016 - Intellectual History Review 26 (2):263-283.
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  12. Northern prince syndrome" : self-affection and self-description in post-Kantian philosophy of religion.Carsten Pallesen - 2013 - In Marius Timmann Mjaaland, Ulrik Houlind Rasmussen & Philipp Stoellger (eds.), Impossible time: past and future in the philosophy of religion. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck.
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  13. Fichte's Moral Philosophy.Owen Ware - 2020 - New York, NY, USA: Oxford University Press.
    Owen Ware here develops and defends a novel interpretation of Fichte’s moral philosophy as an ethics of wholeness. While virtually forgotten for most of the twentieth century, Fichte’s System of Ethics is now recognized by scholars as a masterpiece in the history of post-Kantian thought and a key text for understanding the work of later German idealist thinkers. This book provides a careful examination of the intellectual context in which Fichte’s moral philosophy evolved and of the (...)
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  14.  5
    Post-Kantian Elements in the Intersubjectively Constituted Subject of Universalism as a Metaphilosophy.Józef Leszek Krakowiak - 2020 - Dialogue and Universalism 30 (2):93-135.
    This comparative essay about two kinds of interpersonal-centric humanism is dedicated to the memory of professor Janusz Kuczyński and his conception of dialogical universalism as a metaphilosophy, and shows Immanuel Kant’s thought as a ceaseless source of inspiration for all anti-conservatives and universalists. Kant’s philosophy gave man an unforgettable sense of freedom, because it not only posed the imperative of building a pan-human community of all rational beings, but also revealed the above-natural sense of the human species’ imposition of (...)
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  15.  12
    A Companion to Continental Philosophy.Simon Critchley & William Ralph Schroeder (eds.) - 1998 - Malden, Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell.
    Covering the complete development of post-Kantian Continental philosophy, this volume serves as an essential reference work for philosophers and those engaged in the many disciplines that are integrally related to Continental and European Philosophy.
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  16.  11
    Post-Totalitarian Politics and European Philosophy.Martin Palouš - 1993 - Public Affairs Quarterly 7 (2):149-164.
  17. German Philosophy 1760–1860: The Legacy of Idealism.Terry P. Pinkard - 2002 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In the second half of the eighteenth century, German philosophy came for a while to dominate European philosophy. It changed the way in which not only Europeans, but people all over the world, conceived of themselves and thought about nature, religion, human history, politics, and the structure of the human mind. In this rich and wide-ranging book, Terry Pinkard interweaves the story of 'Germany' - changing during this period from a loose collection of principalities into a newly-emerged (...)
     
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  18. Towards Adualism: Becoming and Nihilism in Nietzsche’s Philosophy.Manuel Dries - 2008 - In Nietzsche on Time and History. Walter de Gruyter.
    For Nietzsche’s hypothesis of a threat of nihilism to be intelligible, this chapter attributes to him at least three assumptions that underpin his philosophical project: (1) what there is, is becoming (and not being), (2) most (if not all) strongly believe in being, and (3) nihilism is a function of the belief in being. This chapter argues that Nietzsche held two doctrines of becoming: one more radical, which he believes is required to fend off nihilism, and one much more moderate—the (...)
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  19. Sellars the Post-Kantian?Terry Pinkard - 2007 - Poznan Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities 92 (1):21-52.
    In Kant's "fact of reason," there is an apparent paradox of our being subject to laws of which we must regard ourselves as the author, while at the same time being normatively bound by the same laws that we cannot see ourselves as authoring. Working out the implications of this apparent paradox generated much of the response to Kant in post-Kantian idealism. Wilfrid Sellars notes the same paradox when he speaks of the "paradox of man's encounter with himself" (...)
     
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  20.  19
    At the Edges of Thought: Deleuze and Post-Kantian Philosophy.Craig Lundy & Daniela Voss (eds.) - 2015 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    This collection situates Deleuze's work and several of his most important concepts in the context of his post-Kantian predecessors, further illuminating both the breadth of his philosophical heritage and the manner in which he moves beyond it. Through a series of studies by leading scholars in the field, At the Edges of Thought sheds new light on key philosophical encounters with thinkers such as Maimon, Kleist, Hölderlin, Fichte, Hegel, Schopenhauer and Feuerbach in Deleuze's texts. Readers are invited to (...)
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  21.  4
    . G. Fichte as a Post-Kantian Philosopher and His Political Theory: A Return to Romanticism.Özgür Olgun Erden - 2018 - IAFOR Journal of Ethics, Religion and Philosophy 4 (1):17-25.
    This paper fundamentally deals with J. G. Fichte’s philosophical views, which reshapes intellectual-philosophical bases of the post-Enlightenment era and makes a strong criticism of Kantian thinking. Philosophically, Fichte’s philosophy, more representing a return to romanticism, will be debated on the basis of some concepts, among of which has been reason, science, tradition, religion, state, individual, and community. From his viewpoint, it will interrogate relationships among ego, morality and moral order. Based on these relationships, it will be tried (...)
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  22. The Significance of §§76 and 77 Of the Critique of Judgment for the Development of Post-Kantian Philosophy (Part 1).Eckart Förster - 2009 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 30 (2):197-217.
  23.  10
    Introduction: The Being of Negation in Post-Kantian Philosophy: The Problem of Negation.Gregory S. Moss - 2022 - In The Being of Negation in Post-Kantian Philosophy. Springer Verlag. pp. 1-30.
    In this introduction to the Being of Negation in Post-Kantian Philosophy, I elucidate the problem of negation in classical Greek philosophy, Kant, and German Idealism. Inspired by the Platonic insight that any inquiry into non-being must impute non-being with the being of non-being, this book sets out to think the being of nothing. Whenever we ask ‘what is nothing?’ we are implicitly asking ‘what is it for nothing to be?’ To answer with a judgment of the (...)
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  24.  22
    The Being of Negation in Post-Kantian Philosophy.Gregory S. Moss (ed.) - 2022 - Springer Verlag.
    By drawing on the insights of diverse scholars from around the globe, this volume systematically investigates the meaning and reality of the concept of negation in Post-Kantian Philosophy—German Idealism, Early German Romanticism, and Neo-Kantianism. The reader benefits from the historical, critical, and systematic investigations contained which trace not only the significance of negation in these traditions, but also the role it has played in shaping the philosophical landscape of Post-Kantian philosophy. By drawing attention to (...)
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  25.  2
    Kantian Legal Philosophy.Arthur Ripstein - 2010 - In Dennis Patterson (ed.), A Companion to Philosophy of Law and Legal Theory. Oxford, UK: Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 392–405.
    This chapter contains sections titled: References.
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  26. Kierkegaard’s Post-Kantian Approach to Anthropology and Selfhood.Roe Fremstedal - 2019 - In Patrick Stokes, Eleanor Helms & Adam Buben (eds.), The Kierkegaardian Mind (Routledge Philosophical Minds). New York: Routledge Philosophical Minds. pp. 319-330.
    This chapter relates Kierkegaard’s views on anthropology and selfhood to Kantian and post-Kantian philosophical anthropology. It focuses on Kierkegaard’s contribution to anthropology, and discusses the relation between philosophical and theological anthropology in Kierkegaard. The chapter gives a synopsis of these issues by focusing on The Sickness unto Death, although important elements of this work are anticipated by Either/Or, The Concept of Anxiety and Concluding Unscientific Postscript. After an historical introduction and brief remarks on Kierkegaard’s method, the chapter (...)
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  27. Toward a Post-Kantian Constructivism.Jack Samuel - 2023 - Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 9 (53):1449–1484.
    The conventional wisdom regarding the aims and shortcomings of Kantian constructivism is mistaken. The aim of metaethical constructivism is not to provide a naturalistic account of the objectivity of normative facts by deriving substantive morality from a conception of agency so thin as to be uncontroversial (a task at which it is generally regarded to have failed). Its aim is to explain the “grip” that normative facts have on us—to avoid what I call the problem of normative alienation. So (...)
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  28.  36
    Hermeneutics in Post-War Continental European Philosophy.David Liakos & Theodore George - 2019 - In Kelly Becker & Iain D. Thomson (eds.), The Cambridge History of Philosophy, 1945–2015. New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press. pp. 399-415.
    Taken in general terms, “hermeneutics” refers to the study of understanding and interpretation, and, traditionally, this study focuses on considerations of the art, method, and foundations of research in the arts and humanities. The study of hermeneutics has been developed and applied in a number of areas of scholarly inquiry, such as biblical exegesis, literary studies, legal studies, and the medical humanities. In the context of post-war Continental European thought, however, hermeneutics is brought into a novel philosophical context (...)
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  29.  47
    Action, interaction and inaction: post-Kantian accounts of thinking, willing, and doing in Fichte and Schopenhauer.Günter Zöller - 2018 - Philosophical Explorations 21 (1):108-121.
    This article features the contributions of Fichte and Schopenhauer to a philosophical account of action against the background of Kant's earlier and influential treatment of the topic. The article first presents Kant's pertinent contributions in the areas of general epistemology and metaphysics, general practical philosophy, the philosophy of law and ethic. Then the focus is on Fichte's further original work on the issue of action in those same areas. Finally, the article turns to Schopenhauer's radical revision of the (...)
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  30.  1
    Autonomy and Sympathy: A Post-Kantian Moral Image.Filimon Peonidis - 2005 - Upa.
    Individuals who value personal autonomy and sympathize with others can be guided by a set of central obligations that are familiar to those sharing in the Western moral tradition. These obligations may not be applicable to every imaginable situation, but the informed determination to act upon them is necessary for combating serious and easily identifiable moral evils. This overall argument is called a post-Kantian moral image. Here, "moral image" is understood as a comprehensive pattern of ethical thought that (...)
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  31. Unearthing the wonder : A "post-Kantian" paradigm in Kant's critique of judgment.John McCumber - 2006 - In Rebecca Kukla (ed.), Aesthetics and Cognition in Kant's Critical Philosophy. Cambridge University Press. pp. 266--290.
  32. Marx's Philosophical Modernism: Post-Kantian Foundations of Historical Materialism.Martin McIvor - 2009 - In Andrew Chitty & Martin McIvor (eds.), Karl Marx and Contemporary Philosophy. Palgrave-Macmillan.
     
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  33. Against the Post-Kantian Interpretation of Hegel: A Study in Proto-Marxist Metaphysics.Michael Morris - 2018 - In Book Hegel’s Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Politics. Routledge. pp. Ch.7.
    This chapter emphasizes four crucial differences that serve to distinguish the proto-Marxist interpretation from the standard post-Kantian framework. The first and foundational difference involves the existence of final causality or internal purposiveness in nature. The now-standard post-Kantian interpretation of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel presupposes Sellars's core distinction between the realm of "empirical description" and the "space of reasons", a distinction that necessarily presupposes the absence of final causality in nature. The proto-Marxist framework approaches Hegel as the (...)
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  34. Deleuze, Hegel, and the Post-Kantian Tradition.Daniel W. Smith - 2000 - Philosophy Today 44 (Supplement):119-131.
  35. From Kant to post-Kantian idealism: German idealism.Sebastian Gardner - 2002 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 76 (1):211–228.
    German idealism has been pictured as an unwarranted deviation from the central epistemological orientation of modern philosophy, and its close historical association with German romanticism is adduced in support of this verdict. This paper proposes an interpretation of German idealism which seeks to grant key importance to its connection with romanticism without thereby undermining its philosophical rationality. I suggest that the fundamental motivation of German idealism is axiological, and that its augment of Kant's idealism is intelligible in terms of (...)
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  36. „Succession of Functions and Classifications in Post-Kantian Naturphilosophie around 1800 “, u P.Stephanie Schmitt - 2007 - In Philippe Huneman (ed.), Understanding purpose: Kant and the philosophy of biology. Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press. pp. 123--135.
  37.  88
    The Significance of §§76 and 77 Of the Critique of Judgment for the Development of Post-Kantian Philosophy (Part 2).Eckhart Förster, Karen Ng & Matthew Congdon - 2010 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 31 (2):323-347.
  38.  8
    The Context and Problematic of PostKantian Philosophy.Frederick C. Beiser - 2017 - In Simon Critchley & William R. Schroeder (eds.), A Companion to Continental Philosophy. Oxford, UK: Blackwell. pp. 19–34.
    Usually, the history of philosophy in the first two decades after the publication of the Kritik der reinen Vernunft (Critique of Pure Reason) in May 1781 is seen as little more than commentary upon and criticism of Kant's classic text. It is chiefly a story about how Kant's successors tried to defend and systematize, or criticize and dismember, his philosophy. The main theme of this story is the central outstanding problem of Kant's philosophy: the transcendental deduction, the (...)
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  39. The Impact of Idealism: Volume 1, Philosophy and Natural Sciences: The Legacy of Post-Kantian German Thought.Karl Ameriks (ed.) - 2013 - Cambridge University Press.
    The first study of its kind, The Impact of Idealism assesses the impact of classical German philosophy on science, religion and culture. This volume explores German Idealism's impact on philosophy and scientific thought. Fourteen essays, by leading authorities in their respective fields, each focus on the legacy of a particular idea that emerged around 1800, when the underlying concepts of modern philosophy were being formed, challenged and criticised, leaving a legacy that extends to all physical areas and (...)
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  40.  29
    Schopenhauer on Idealism, Indian and European.Christopher Ryan - 2015 - Philosophy East and West 65 (1):18-35.
    This article is an examination of Schopenhauer’s evaluation of the comparative philosophical merits of modern European and ancient Indian idealism. Schopenhauer was an enthusiastic advocate of Indian wisdom, but it is rarely noted that he excluded it from the history of philosophy proper. Although he traced the origin of the “fundamental” viewpoint of idealism to the ancient ṛṣis of India, he also maintained that it had not received its properly philosophical articulation and defence until Kant. But when we (...)
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  41. The presentation of the infinite in the finite' : the place of God in post-kantian philosophy.Stephen Mulhall - 2007 - In Brian Leiter & Michael Rosen (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Continental Philosophy. Oxford University Press.
     
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  42. The presentation of the infinite in the finite' : the place of God in post-kantian philosophy.Stephen Mulhall - 2007 - In Brian Leiter & Michael Rosen (eds.), The Oxford handbook of continental philosophy. Oxford University Press.
     
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  43. Self-knowledge-A problem in post-Kantian philosophy-The relationship between Reinhold, Holderlin and Fichte.J. Stolzenberg - 1996 - Revue Internationale de Philosophie 50 (197):461-482.
     
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  44. Nietzsche kaip „pokantininkas " ir Kantas kaip „ponyčininkas "poklasikinėje Gilles Deleuze'o filosofijoje / Nietzsche as „post-kantian " and Kant as „post-nietzschean in the post-classical philosophy of Gilles Deleuze“.Jūratė Baranova - 2005 - Žmogus ir Žodis 7:3-12.
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  45.  18
    Facing being: the significance of Thomist ontological epistemology to realism in post-Kantian philosophy.Callum D. Scott - 2014 - South African Journal of Philosophy 33 (3):347-364.
  46.  7
    Sacrifice in the Post-Kantian Tradition Perspectivism, Intersubjectivity, and Recognition.Paolo Diego Bubbio - 2014 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    _An examination of the philosophical notion of sacrifice from Kant to Nietzsche._.
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  47.  11
    The Hegelian Dialectic and Post-Kantian Idealism.Vernon J. Bourke - 1942 - Modern Schoolman 19 (4):66-69.
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    The Ethos of Knowledge in Kantian and in Buddhist Philosophy. Remarks on some Theses from Standpoint of European Philosophy.Bhikkhu Ñāṇajīvako - 1986 - Kant Studien 77 (1-4):59-83.
  49.  7
    Creativity and genius as epistemic virtues: Kant and early post‐Kantians on the teachability of epistemic virtue.Paul Ziche - 2023 - Metaphilosophy 54 (2-3):268-279.
    There is a classical paradox in education that also affects the epistemic virtues: the paradox inherent in the demand to develop general strategies for training persons to be free and creative individuals. This problem becomes particularly salient with respect to the epistemic virtue of creativity, the more so if we consider a radical form of creativity, namely, genius. This paper explores a historical constellation in which rigorous claims about the standards for knowledge and morality were developed, along with a highly (...)
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    Kant and the PostKantian Debate.Tom Rockmore - 2006 - In In Kant's Wake. Oxford, UK: Blackwell. pp. 22–48.
    The prelims comprise: On the Modern Philosophical Background On Kant's Relation to the Contemporary Philosophical Background Kant's Letter to Marcus Herz Kant's Two Epistemological Solutions in the Critique of Pure Reason Kant's Copernican Revolution in Philosophy as Constructivism Kant's Copernican Revolution, Science, and Metaphysics Kant's Copernican Revolution in Philosophy and Metaphysics Kant, Hegel, and the Historical Turn.
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