A now influential reading of Kant's statement of innate right in the Doctrine of Right interprets it as affirming a basic right of each to freedom of choice and action. This reading treats the innate right as foundational to Kant's entire philosophy of right—all other rights are said to be derived from the innate right. I call this the ‘free choice’ reading of innate right; while it enjoys considerable intuitive appeal, it is contestable on textual and systematic grounds. I show that the free choice reading (a) conflates Kantian external freedom with liberal negative freedom and (b) that its foundationalist assumptions about innate right conflict with Kant's critical method of justification. I go on to offer an alternative interpretation of...
I explore two claims that are often attributed to Kant: first, that conformity with the moral law wi...
Kant's attempts to formulate a conception of the harmony of nature and freedom have two logical pres...
The paper provides a systematic account of Kant’s ‘right to be somewhere’ as introduced in the Doctr...
A now influential reading of Kant's statement of innate right in the Doctrine of Right interprets it...
Kant compares a merely empirical doctrine of right to the wooden head in Phaedru’s fable, i. e. a he...
The rediscovery of Kant’s Doctrine of Right resulted in many attempts to apply Kant’s position to c...
The chapter deals with the two most distinctive elements of the Introduction of the Naturrecht Feyer...
I argue that by considering Kant’s engagement with previous theorists of natural right, we can gain ...
The idea of a preliminary commons – a sphere of common property prior to private property – is prese...
The idea of a preliminary commons – a sphere of common property prior to private property – is prese...
Kant argues that it is only as citizens of a properly constituted state that persons are able to res...
I suggest that looking at how Kant’s arguments relate to the stand of the discussion on the relation...
According to Kant, “right in a state of nature is called private right” (MS, AA VI, S. 242). It is m...
This article has two objectives: first, to bring to the fore Kant’s neglected distinction between ‘c...
The Kantian doctrine of rights is a conception of equality of human beings which in a sense is pre-m...
I explore two claims that are often attributed to Kant: first, that conformity with the moral law wi...
Kant's attempts to formulate a conception of the harmony of nature and freedom have two logical pres...
The paper provides a systematic account of Kant’s ‘right to be somewhere’ as introduced in the Doctr...
A now influential reading of Kant's statement of innate right in the Doctrine of Right interprets it...
Kant compares a merely empirical doctrine of right to the wooden head in Phaedru’s fable, i. e. a he...
The rediscovery of Kant’s Doctrine of Right resulted in many attempts to apply Kant’s position to c...
The chapter deals with the two most distinctive elements of the Introduction of the Naturrecht Feyer...
I argue that by considering Kant’s engagement with previous theorists of natural right, we can gain ...
The idea of a preliminary commons – a sphere of common property prior to private property – is prese...
The idea of a preliminary commons – a sphere of common property prior to private property – is prese...
Kant argues that it is only as citizens of a properly constituted state that persons are able to res...
I suggest that looking at how Kant’s arguments relate to the stand of the discussion on the relation...
According to Kant, “right in a state of nature is called private right” (MS, AA VI, S. 242). It is m...
This article has two objectives: first, to bring to the fore Kant’s neglected distinction between ‘c...
The Kantian doctrine of rights is a conception of equality of human beings which in a sense is pre-m...
I explore two claims that are often attributed to Kant: first, that conformity with the moral law wi...
Kant's attempts to formulate a conception of the harmony of nature and freedom have two logical pres...
The paper provides a systematic account of Kant’s ‘right to be somewhere’ as introduced in the Doctr...