edited by George MacDonald Ross and Tony McWalter.
New York :
Thoemmes Continuum,
2005.
1 online resource (xv, 374 pages)
Selected conference papers.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction; ''ought'' implies ''can'': kant and luther, a contrast; confused perceptions, darkened concepts: some features of kant''s leibniz-critique; thought and sensibility in leibniz, kant and bradley; ''original nonsense'': art and genius in kant''s aesthetic; fichte, beck and schelling in kant''s opus postumum; imagination as a connecting middle in schelling''s reconstruction of kant; the early reception of kant''s thought in england 1785-1805; hamilton''s reading of kant: a chapter in the early scottish reception of kant''s thought.
Aspects of kant''s influence on british theologynotes on contributors; index of names; a; b; c; d; e; f; g; h; j; k; l; m; n; o; p; q; r; s; t; v; w; z.
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This book illustrates the extent to which Kant's work has permeated wide areas of learing, across many disciplines, despite a general ignorance, especially in England, of the details of his highly technical philosophy. Consisting of nine major contributions to the Leeds Kant Conference in April 1990, Kant and his Influence shows how Kant's thought has had a marked effect on philosophers, both Continental and Analytic, social and art historians, theologians and Church leaders.