Nir Eisikovits, Associate Professor and Director, Graduate Program in Ethics and Public Policy, in the Department of Philosophy, Suffolk University, considers the challenges facing Kant’s idea of peace and speaks about the need for a theory of truces and ceasefires. He characterizes the philosophical and political commitments involved in truce making and considers the normative conditions under which it is most appropriate to make truces. Respondent: Alice MacLachlan, York University, Department of Philosophy
Kant sees the gradual implementation of a cosmopolitan world order as necessary for securing peace a...
This research aims to investigate the kantian project Toward Perpetual Peace from its moral juridica...
Despite it being usually construed as a paradigmatic instance of deontology, Kant’s moral work on wa...
time: 2.30-4.30pmroom: Osgoode Hall – IKB 2010speaker: Nir Eisikovits (Suffolk)respondent: Alice Mac...
In the texts in which Immanuel Kant discusses the principles governing international relations—inclu...
“War” and “peace” are perhaps the most speculative bipolar notions in human history. Since the dawn...
Kant argues that it is the duty of humanity to strive for an enduring peace between the nations. For...
There exists a standard view of Kant’s position on global order and this view informs much of curren...
World peace was a common theoretical consideration among philosophers during Europe’s Enlightenment ...
Kant's various teachings concerning (world) peace are characterized by a philosophically unique real...
This paper touches upon the selected issues of Kant’s and Hegel’s political philosophy, namely “war”...
Even an idealist philosopher like Immanuel Kant (1795) considered war to be the natural state of man...
Immanuel Kant's political writings, which represent a philosophical revolution in the name of the mo...
I shall argue that it is Kant’s philosophical and political ambition to outline a theory of perpetua...
Kant described the state as a ‘moral person’, and did so when dealing with international relations. ...
Kant sees the gradual implementation of a cosmopolitan world order as necessary for securing peace a...
This research aims to investigate the kantian project Toward Perpetual Peace from its moral juridica...
Despite it being usually construed as a paradigmatic instance of deontology, Kant’s moral work on wa...
time: 2.30-4.30pmroom: Osgoode Hall – IKB 2010speaker: Nir Eisikovits (Suffolk)respondent: Alice Mac...
In the texts in which Immanuel Kant discusses the principles governing international relations—inclu...
“War” and “peace” are perhaps the most speculative bipolar notions in human history. Since the dawn...
Kant argues that it is the duty of humanity to strive for an enduring peace between the nations. For...
There exists a standard view of Kant’s position on global order and this view informs much of curren...
World peace was a common theoretical consideration among philosophers during Europe’s Enlightenment ...
Kant's various teachings concerning (world) peace are characterized by a philosophically unique real...
This paper touches upon the selected issues of Kant’s and Hegel’s political philosophy, namely “war”...
Even an idealist philosopher like Immanuel Kant (1795) considered war to be the natural state of man...
Immanuel Kant's political writings, which represent a philosophical revolution in the name of the mo...
I shall argue that it is Kant’s philosophical and political ambition to outline a theory of perpetua...
Kant described the state as a ‘moral person’, and did so when dealing with international relations. ...
Kant sees the gradual implementation of a cosmopolitan world order as necessary for securing peace a...
This research aims to investigate the kantian project Toward Perpetual Peace from its moral juridica...
Despite it being usually construed as a paradigmatic instance of deontology, Kant’s moral work on wa...