Description

Book Synopsis

Scholarship on Immanuel Kant and the German Idealists often attends to the points of divergence. While differences are vital, this volume does the opposite, offering a close inspection of some of the key Kantian concepts that are embraced and retained by the Idealists. It does this by bringing together an original set of critical reflections on the role that the German Idealists ascribe to fundamental Kantian ideas and insights within their own systems. A central motivation for this volume is to resist reductive accounts of the complex relationship between German Idealism and Kantâs Idealism through a study of the inheritance of Kantâs legacy in German Idealism. As such, this volume contributes to new interpretations and rethinking of traditional accounts in light of these reflections on some of the significant components of German Idealism that can defensibly be called Kantian. The contributors to this volume are Dina Emundts, Eckart FÃrster, Gerad Gentry, Johannes Haag, Dean Moyar

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: The Legacy of Kant in German Idealism

Gerad Gentry

Part I. The Emergence of a New Logical Method

2. From Transcendental Logic to Speculative Logic (with appendix: G.W.F. Hegel: C. The Science, translated by Martin Shuster)

Eckart Förster

3. Hegel’s Logic of Purposiveness

Gerad Gentry

4. Kant and Hegel on the Drive of Reason: From Concept to Idea through Inference

Dean Moyar

5.‘With What Must Transcendental Philosophy Begin?’ Kant and Hegel on Nothingness and Indeterminacy

Nicholas Stang

Part II. Time, Intuitive Understanding, and Practical Reason

6. Kant and Hegel on Time

Dina Emundts

7. Intuiting the Original Unity? – Modality and Intellectual Intuition in Hölderlin’s Urteil und Sein

Johannes Haag

8. The Fate of Practical Reason: Kant and Schelling on Virtue, Happiness, and the Postulate of God’s Existence

Karin Nisenbaum

Part III. The Organization of Matter and Aesthetic Freedom

9. Kant, Schelling and the Organization of Matter

Dalia Nassar

10. Aesthetics and the Experience of Freedom: A Kantian Legacy in Hegel’s
Philosophy of Art

Lydia Moland

11. Aesthetic Conditions of Freedom: Friedrich Schiller as a Complicated Kantian

Anne Pollok

Kantian Legacies in German Idealism

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    A Hardback by Gerad Gentry

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      View other formats and editions of Kantian Legacies in German Idealism by Gerad Gentry

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis
      Publication Date: 5/11/2021 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781138367364, 978-1138367364
      ISBN10: 1138367362
      Also in:
      Philosophy

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Scholarship on Immanuel Kant and the German Idealists often attends to the points of divergence. While differences are vital, this volume does the opposite, offering a close inspection of some of the key Kantian concepts that are embraced and retained by the Idealists. It does this by bringing together an original set of critical reflections on the role that the German Idealists ascribe to fundamental Kantian ideas and insights within their own systems. A central motivation for this volume is to resist reductive accounts of the complex relationship between German Idealism and Kantâs Idealism through a study of the inheritance of Kantâs legacy in German Idealism. As such, this volume contributes to new interpretations and rethinking of traditional accounts in light of these reflections on some of the significant components of German Idealism that can defensibly be called Kantian. The contributors to this volume are Dina Emundts, Eckart FÃrster, Gerad Gentry, Johannes Haag, Dean Moyar

      Table of Contents

      1. Introduction: The Legacy of Kant in German Idealism

      Gerad Gentry

      Part I. The Emergence of a New Logical Method

      2. From Transcendental Logic to Speculative Logic (with appendix: G.W.F. Hegel: C. The Science, translated by Martin Shuster)

      Eckart Förster

      3. Hegel’s Logic of Purposiveness

      Gerad Gentry

      4. Kant and Hegel on the Drive of Reason: From Concept to Idea through Inference

      Dean Moyar

      5.‘With What Must Transcendental Philosophy Begin?’ Kant and Hegel on Nothingness and Indeterminacy

      Nicholas Stang

      Part II. Time, Intuitive Understanding, and Practical Reason

      6. Kant and Hegel on Time

      Dina Emundts

      7. Intuiting the Original Unity? – Modality and Intellectual Intuition in Hölderlin’s Urteil und Sein

      Johannes Haag

      8. The Fate of Practical Reason: Kant and Schelling on Virtue, Happiness, and the Postulate of God’s Existence

      Karin Nisenbaum

      Part III. The Organization of Matter and Aesthetic Freedom

      9. Kant, Schelling and the Organization of Matter

      Dalia Nassar

      10. Aesthetics and the Experience of Freedom: A Kantian Legacy in Hegel’s
      Philosophy of Art

      Lydia Moland

      11. Aesthetic Conditions of Freedom: Friedrich Schiller as a Complicated Kantian

      Anne Pollok

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