Kant has found the pattern of his critical philosophy in the jurisdictional process. In the Rightslehre (1796), he uses his critical method and, to answer to the question Quid juris?, he examines the categories and concepts of law ( in occidental thought, but without interrogation upon the British Common Law ). He explains that, before the critical Court of reason, the “transcendental deduction” discovers the rational and pure Idea which is the a priori principle of law. But as all the “Ideas of reason”, this sublime Idea of law does not belong to our world. Then, it is necessary to-day to revise the notion of “transcendental” and to transform the structures of our reason
The paper advances the hypothesis that Kant originally wrote the Introduction: Idea of a Transcenden...
The lectures on natural law delivered by Kant in the winter semester of 1784/85 have recently attrac...
The Doctrine of Right is one of Kant’s most disputed works: Defamed as an alleged sign of Kant’s eme...
Kant describes a conflict among the different theories of knowledge. A productive conflict whose eme...
The justification of criminal law is among the most controversial parts of Kant's Metaphysical Princ...
Defence date: 3 November 2017Examining Board: Prof. Dennis Patterson, EUI (Supervisor), Prof. Nehal ...
Kantian legalism is now the dominant scholarly interpretation of Kant and an important approach to l...
Immanuel Kant (1724–1804) was a Prussian German philosopher in the Age of Enlightenment and became t...
The “Transcendental Dialectic” was for a long time an insufficiently studied section of the “Critiqu...
The general assumption of this paper is that the critical Kant must be understood as a philosopher t...
This work outlines Immanuel Kant's (1724-1804) philosophy of law, discussing its framing within jusn...
This text presents a challenging alternative theory of legal philosophy. The central thesis of the b...
The concept of “Transcendental” is the most fundamental concept of Kant’s theoretical philosophy. He...
Published Online: 2013-09-01The aim of the present paper is to discuss how the legal metaphors in Ka...
Kant' s jurídical and polítical meditations fit inside the critical system as a proyect that faces t...
The paper advances the hypothesis that Kant originally wrote the Introduction: Idea of a Transcenden...
The lectures on natural law delivered by Kant in the winter semester of 1784/85 have recently attrac...
The Doctrine of Right is one of Kant’s most disputed works: Defamed as an alleged sign of Kant’s eme...
Kant describes a conflict among the different theories of knowledge. A productive conflict whose eme...
The justification of criminal law is among the most controversial parts of Kant's Metaphysical Princ...
Defence date: 3 November 2017Examining Board: Prof. Dennis Patterson, EUI (Supervisor), Prof. Nehal ...
Kantian legalism is now the dominant scholarly interpretation of Kant and an important approach to l...
Immanuel Kant (1724–1804) was a Prussian German philosopher in the Age of Enlightenment and became t...
The “Transcendental Dialectic” was for a long time an insufficiently studied section of the “Critiqu...
The general assumption of this paper is that the critical Kant must be understood as a philosopher t...
This work outlines Immanuel Kant's (1724-1804) philosophy of law, discussing its framing within jusn...
This text presents a challenging alternative theory of legal philosophy. The central thesis of the b...
The concept of “Transcendental” is the most fundamental concept of Kant’s theoretical philosophy. He...
Published Online: 2013-09-01The aim of the present paper is to discuss how the legal metaphors in Ka...
Kant' s jurídical and polítical meditations fit inside the critical system as a proyect that faces t...
The paper advances the hypothesis that Kant originally wrote the Introduction: Idea of a Transcenden...
The lectures on natural law delivered by Kant in the winter semester of 1784/85 have recently attrac...
The Doctrine of Right is one of Kant’s most disputed works: Defamed as an alleged sign of Kant’s eme...