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Passions and evil in Kant's philosophy

Manuscrito 37 (2):333-355 (2014)

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  1. Kant and the intelligibility of evil.Allen W. Wood - 2009 - In Sharon Anderson-Gold & Pablo Muchnik (eds.), Kant's Anatomy of Evil. New York: Cambridge University Press.
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  • Emotion and Evil in Kant.Michael Rohlf - 2013 - Review of Metaphysics 66 (4):749-773.
    On one common reading of Kant, emotional states that he calls feelings, desires, and inclinations are thoroughly non-cognitive and play no positive role in the moral life, which is instead about subduing our sensible nature through a discipline of reason. Against this common reading, this paper argues that Kant actually holds a weak cognitivist view of at least some emotions, according to which emotions are responses to judgments – or to what Kant calls maxims – that are about what makes (...)
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