This dissertation explores the relationship between Kant and Melville, paying close attention to the former’s idea of freedom and the latter’s effort to exhibit freedom without transforming it into individualism. It is also an attempt to read Melville’s novels as responses to Kant’s ethical critique of the novel in general. In Critique of Practical Reason, grounding his ethics on the idea of freedom, Kant denounces the novel because it causes moral enthusiasm by transforming freedom into a fantasy, which becomes a core of individualism by inducing great pleasure in the subject. The novel appears to be able to exhibit freedom since at a critical moment the hero or heroine decides to act independently of the laws of nature and culture, but, p...
This dissertation addresses the problem of “radical evil” as first articulated by Immanuel Kant, and...
Kant’s critical philosophy represents a rudimentary existentialism, or a proto-existentialism, in th...
The book aspires to show the inherent paradoxes of the “pure idea” of freedom and its foreignness, a...
This dissertation seeks to analyze Herman Melville\u27s later novels— Pierre (1852), Israel Potter (...
The dissertation articulates an incompatibilist model of rational moral agency along Kantian lines. ...
This dissertation develops a novel interpretation of Kant’s political thought, rooting it in a uniqu...
Kant’s early critics maintained that his theory of freedom faces a dilemma: either it reduces the wi...
The main idea behind this article is that in order to understand the meaning that Kant’s politica...
Kant claims in his third Critique (1790) to have proven that the idea of freedom is scibilium, known...
Kant structured his philosophy as to be possible for one to affirm we are beings that are part of th...
The subject of this article is the analysis of the concept of freedom as one of the fundamental issu...
Freedom is a fundamental concept in Kant's philosophy, including theoretical and practical philosoph...
The theme of this dissertation is the relation between freedom and justice. I approach this theme by...
This book divides into four sections. Section one examines Kant's Copernican revolution in philosoph...
The theme of this dissertation is the relation between freedom and justice. I approach this theme by...
This dissertation addresses the problem of “radical evil” as first articulated by Immanuel Kant, and...
Kant’s critical philosophy represents a rudimentary existentialism, or a proto-existentialism, in th...
The book aspires to show the inherent paradoxes of the “pure idea” of freedom and its foreignness, a...
This dissertation seeks to analyze Herman Melville\u27s later novels— Pierre (1852), Israel Potter (...
The dissertation articulates an incompatibilist model of rational moral agency along Kantian lines. ...
This dissertation develops a novel interpretation of Kant’s political thought, rooting it in a uniqu...
Kant’s early critics maintained that his theory of freedom faces a dilemma: either it reduces the wi...
The main idea behind this article is that in order to understand the meaning that Kant’s politica...
Kant claims in his third Critique (1790) to have proven that the idea of freedom is scibilium, known...
Kant structured his philosophy as to be possible for one to affirm we are beings that are part of th...
The subject of this article is the analysis of the concept of freedom as one of the fundamental issu...
Freedom is a fundamental concept in Kant's philosophy, including theoretical and practical philosoph...
The theme of this dissertation is the relation between freedom and justice. I approach this theme by...
This book divides into four sections. Section one examines Kant's Copernican revolution in philosoph...
The theme of this dissertation is the relation between freedom and justice. I approach this theme by...
This dissertation addresses the problem of “radical evil” as first articulated by Immanuel Kant, and...
Kant’s critical philosophy represents a rudimentary existentialism, or a proto-existentialism, in th...
The book aspires to show the inherent paradoxes of the “pure idea” of freedom and its foreignness, a...