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Kant on Democracy

Kant Studien 107 (1):64-88 (2016)

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  1. Why does Kant Think that Democracy is Necessarily Despotic?Luigi Caranti - 2023 - Kantian Review 28 (2):167-183.
    Kant’s criticism of democracy has been traditionally defused with the consideration that Kant’s aversion is not to democracy per se, but to direct democracy. However, what Kant says – ‘to prevent the republican constitution from being confused with the democratic one, as commonly happens’ (ZeF, 8: 351) – appears to count not only against direct democracy, but also against conceptions of democracy closer to the ones we are accustomed to. By offering a new account of what Kant sees as the (...)
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  • The Mirage of Kantian Human Rights.Cristoph Hanisch - 2018 - Con-Textos Kantianos 8:92-112.
    Contrary to a widespread view, I argue that the contemporary notion of “human rights” does not have a comfortable home in Kant’s legal philosophy. Even the one “innate right of humanity,” that many consider the pre-institutional Archimedian starting point of Kant’ s argument, is a normative conception that is “juridified all the way down.” In the state of nature, all private rights are present only in the form of the consequents of conditional claims about legal rights of the form, “If (...)
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