Oxford University Press, 2019. — xii, 272 p. — ISBN 978-0-19-884185-2.
True PDFIn this volume, Karl Ameriks explores 'Kantian subjects' in three senses. In Part I, he first clarifies the most distinctive features-such as freedom and autonomy-of Kant's notion of what it is for us to be a subject. Other chapters then consider related 'subjects' that are basic topics in other parts of Kant's philosophy, such as his notions of necessity and history. Part II examines the ways in which many of us, as 'late modern, ' have been highly influenced by Kant's philosophy and its indirect effect on our self-conception through successive generations of post-Kantians, such as Hegel and Schelling, and early Romantic writers such as Holderlin, Schlegel, and Novalis, thus making us 'Kantian subjects' in a new historical sense. By defending the fundamentals of Kant's ethics in reaction to some of the latest scholarship in the opening chapters, Ameriks offers an extensive argument that Holderlin expresses a valuable philosophical position that is much closer to Kant than has generally been recognized. He also argues that it was necessary for Kant's position to be supplemented by the new conception, introduced by the post-Kantians, of philosophy as fundamentally historical, and that this conception has had a growing influence on the most interesting strands of Anglophone as well as Continental philosophy.
Note on Sources and Key to Abbreviations and Translations
KantIntroduction to an Extended Era
On the Many Senses of “Self-Determination”
From A to B: On “Critique and Morals”
Revisiting Freedom as Autonomy
Once Again: The End of All Things
Vindicating Autonomy: Kant, Sartre, and O’Neill
Universality, Necessity, and Law in General in Kant
Prauss and Kant’s Three Unities: Subject, Object, and Subject and Object Together
SuccessorsSome Persistent Presumptions of Hegelian Anti-Subjectivism
History, Idealism, and Schelling
History, Succession, and German Romanticism
Hölderlin’s Kantian Path
On Some Reactions to “Kant’s Tragic Problem”
The Historical Turn and Late Modernity
Beyond the Living and the Dead: On Post-Kantian Philosophy as Historical Appropriation
References
Index