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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
61

A RELAÇÃO ENTRE MAL E MORALIDADE EM IMMANUEL KANT / THE RELATION BETWEEN EVIL AND MORALITY IN IMMANUEL KANT

Matzenbacher, Ramon Alexandre 22 March 2013 (has links)
Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / The present dissertation aims to develop and establish the relation between evil and morality in Immanuel Kant s philosophy. For that aim we will approach the concept of Radical Evil, introduced by Kant in the work Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason. We will explore also the proposal of moral foundation exposed by the philosopher in Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysics of Morals. The development of these subjects will remit us overwhelmingly to the concepts of human nature, propensity to evil and moral law. Only through the comprehension these various concepts we will be able to establish the proper connections between evil and morality. / A presente dissertação visa desenvolver e estabelecer a relação entre mal e moralidade na filosofia de Immanuel Kant. Para tanto iremos abordar o conceito de Mal Radical, apresentado por Kant na obra a Religião nos Limites da Simples Razão. Também iremos explorar a proposta de fundamentação moral exposta pelo filósofo na Fundamentação da Metafísica dos Costumes. Desenvolver tais temáticas nos remeterá irresistivelmente aos conceitos de natureza humana, propensão ao mal e lei moral. Somente através da compreensão destes diversos conceitos é que nos encontraremos aptos a estabelecer as devidas conexões entre mal e moralidade.
62

Die Bedeutung antiker Theorien für die Genese und Systematik von Kants Philosophie : eine Analyse der drei Kriterien /

Santozki, Ulrike. January 2006 (has links)
Zugl.: Marburg, Universiẗat, Diss., 2004.
63

Weltbürgerliches Völkerrecht : kantianische Brücke zwischen konstitutioneller Souveränität und humanitärer Intervention /

Lange-Bertalot, Nils. January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Univ., Diss.--Speyer, 2005. / Literaturverz. S. [567] - 578.
64

Die Kopernikanische Wende : Kants Neubegründung der Metaphysik in der reinen Vernunft /

Knapp, Tilo. January 2008 (has links)
Zugl.: Tübingen, Universiẗat, Diss., 2005.
65

Is Kant's Account of Free Will Coherent?

Dumond, Paul 03 May 2017 (has links)
Whether Kant’s account of free will is coherent or not depends upon how we interpret him. On the one hand, if we understand Kant as providing some metaphysical solution to the problem of free will, which secures the reality of free will for agents, then his account seems to be incoherent. One the other hand, if we understand Kant’s account as merely providing a defense of the assumption, or idea of freedom for practical purposes, then his account seems to be useful and coherent. I will argue that the latter account of free will is the one that Kant provides in his works, and will illustrate how this account might shed light on to our epistemic limits and our nature as human beings.
66

Kant and the Ground(s) of Dignity: The Centrality of the Fact of Reason

Britton, William 12 August 2016 (has links)
Kant famously claims that autonomy is the ground of dignity. If he is correct about the grounding relationship, then doubts about our autonomy entail doubts about our dignity. Here, I attempt to show that Kant is sensitive to this problem, and invokes the ‘fact of reason’ (Faktum der Vernunft) as the key piece of evidence for our autonomy, and therefore our dignity. But as is well known, Kant’s appeal to the Faktum is controversial. After presenting an exegetical case for the connection between dignity and the fact of reason, I respond to two prominent criticisms of Kant’s strategy in the Critique of Practical Reason in attempt to defend Kant’s use of the Faktum, and hence to preserve his conception of the dignity of humanity.
67

Kant With Foucault: On The Dangers Of The Theoretical Reification Of The Subject To Freedom And The Need For A Practical Psychology

Valentine, Matthew Gordon 04 May 2017 (has links)
In this dissertation I consider the question, "Is it possible to think the subject qua subject or must any theoretical attempt to understand the subject necessarily reify it?" To answer this question, I appealed to Immanuel Kant's distinction between theoretical and practical reason, noting that practical reason could think the subject as a free soul rather than as a naturally-determined object. I then divided the sciences of the subject into four general types to determine which science could think the subject qua subject. Three sciences were shown to necessarily reify the subject: empirical psychology, rational psychology, and heteronomous ethics. I then paralleled Kant's insight with Michel Foucault's analyses of the human sciences, showing the concrete consequences of objectification. Using Foucault's work on ethical practice and askesis as a guide, I returned to Kant and explained how practical reason can think the subject qua subject only insofar as it considers the subject as something to be made rather than a theoretical object to know. I then posed the question, “What are the necessary conditions for someone to be a subject of possible experience?” which led into a Kantian-inspired theory of love and intersubjectivity. Finally, I concluded that contemporary psychology is mired in an impasse between happiness and freedom, insofar as therapeutic practice is no longer an ethic. I suggest the need for a practical psychology to solve this impasse. / McAnulty College and Graduate School of Liberal Arts; / Philosophy / PhD; / Dissertation;
68

Autonomy, de facto and de jure

Tulipana, Paul 13 April 2011 (has links)
On a standard philosophical conception, being autonomous is roughly equivalent to having some particular natural capacity. This paper provides argues that this conception is incorrect, or at least incomplete. The first chapter suggests that adopting an alternative conception of autonomy promises to resolve to several objections to the metaethical constitutivism, and so promises to provide highly desirable theory of moral reasons. The second chapter first motivates a broadly Kantian account of autonomous action, and then gives reasons to think that Kant's own development of this theory runs into damaging action-theoretic problems. The way to address these problems, I argue, is to modify Kant's account of autonomy in a way that leaves no room for the standard conception of autonomy to do any work.
69

Kantian Conceptualism and Apperception

Miller, Raleigh S 08 May 2009 (has links)
In this paper I argue, with many leading commentators, that Kant is a conceptualist. I support this conclusion, argued for independently by Hannah Ginsborg and John McDowell, by appeal to the analyticity of Kant’s apperception principle in the transcendental deduction. I argue that the apperception principle, if taken as an analytic proposition, implies that any mental representation that figures into discursive cognition is the product of a priori synthesis. I further argue that making a priori synthesis a condition for the possibility of any mental representation is sufficient to make mental representation conceptual in the relevant sense. This, I argue, strongly suggests that Kant is a conceptualist.
70

But What Kind of Badness?: An Inquiry into the Ethical Significance of Pain

Hookom, Andrew L 22 April 2011 (has links)
In this thesis, I argue against a claim about pain which I call the "Minimization Thesis" or MT. According to MT, pain is objectively unconditionally intrinsically bad. Using the case of grief, I argue that although MT may be true of pain as such, it is not true of particular pains. I then turn to an examination of the justification provided by Thomas Nagle for offering the MT and find that his argument is inadequate because it depends on an implausible phenomenology of pain experience. I argue it is more plausible to claim, as Kant does, that pain has desire-conditional badness. Finally, I present a Nietzschean argument for the irreducible complexity of badness. I suggest we may be willing to concede pain's badness so readily only because it has not been specified what kind of badness it actually has.

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