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  1. Review of Allen W. Wood: Kant's Moral Religion[REVIEW]Francis E. Wilson - 1970 - Ethics 81 (1):79-85.
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  • Kant's Moral Religion.Allen W. Wood - 1970 - Ithaca,: Cornell University Press.
    Kant's Moral Religion argues that Kant's doctrine of religious belief if consistent with his best critical thinking and, in fact, that the "moral arguments"--along with the faith they justify--are an integral part of Kant's critical thinking.
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  • (2 other versions)Transcendental arguments.Barry Stroud - 1968 - Journal of Philosophy 65 (9):241-256.
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  • Opinion, belief or faith, and knowledge.Leslie Stevenson - 2003 - Kantian Review 7:72-101.
    Kant famously said he 'had to deny knowledge in order to make room for faith ’ . But what exactly was his conception of Glaube, and how does it fit into his epistemology? In the first Critique it is not until the concluding Method section that he explicitly addresses these issues. In the Canon of Pure Reason he lists three questions that sum up ‘all interest of my reason’: What can I know? What should I do? What may I hope? (...)
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  • (1 other version)The Claim of Reason: Wittgenstein, Skepticism, Morality, and Tragedy.S. Cavell - 1979 - Critical Philosophy 1 (1):97.
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  • (1 other version)The Claim of Reason: Wittgenstein, Scepticism, Mortality and Tragedy.Stanley Cavell - 1982 - Mind 91 (362):292-295.
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  • The Inner Voice: Kant on Conditionality and God as a Cause.Rachel Barney - 2015 - In Joachim Aufderheide & Ralf M. Bader (eds.), The Highest Good in Aristotle and Kant. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press UK. pp. 158-182.
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  • Manifest Reality: Kant's Idealism and His Realism.Lucy Allais - 2015 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Lucy Allais presents an original interpretation of Kant's transcendental idealism. She argues that his distinction between things in themselves and things as they appear to us has both epistemological and metaphysical components. Kant is committed to a genuine idealism about things as they appear to us, but this is not a phenomenalist idealism. He is committed to the claim that there is an aspect of reality that grounds mind-dependent spatio-temporal objects, and which we cannot cognize, but he does not assert (...)
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  • The Goal of Transcendental Arguments.Barry Stroud - 1999 - In Robert Stern (ed.), Transcendental Arguments: Problems and Prospects. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press UK.
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  • Kierkegaard's Journals and Notebooks, Volume 1: Journals Aa-Dd.SørenHG Kierkegaard - 2007 - Princeton University Press.
    I would like to write a novel in which the main character would be a man who got a pair of glasses, one lens of which reduced images as powerfully as an oxyhydrogen microscope, and the other of which magnified on the same scale, so that he perceived everything relatively.? A flight of fancy by an aspiring science fiction writer? While it may sound as such, this wistful musing is one of the little-discussed personal reflections of nineteenth-century philosopher Søren Kierkegaard, (...)
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  • (1 other version)Kant's Practical Postulates and the Limits of the Critical System.Sebastian Gardner - 2011 - Hegel Bulletin 32 (1-2):187-215.
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  • All or nothing: systematicity, transcendental arguments, and skepticism in German idealism.Paul W. Franks - 2005 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
    In this work, the first overview of the German Idealism that is both conceptual and methodological, Paul W. Franks offers a philosophical reconstruction that is...
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  • The form of practical knowledge: a study of the categorical imperative.Stephen P. Engstrom - 2009 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
    Introduction -- Part I: Willing as practical knowing -- The will and practical judgment -- Fundamental practical judgments : the wish for happiness -- Part II: From presuppositions of judgment to the idea of a categorical imperative -- The formal presuppositions of practical judgment -- Constraints on willing -- Part III: Interpretation -- The categorical imperative -- Applications -- Conclusion.
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  • The Claim of Reason. Wittgenstein, Scepticism, Morality and Tragedy.H. O. Mounce - 1981 - Philosophical Quarterly 31 (124):280-282.
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  • Christianity and Nonsense.Henry E. Allison - 1967 - Review of Metaphysics 20 (3):432 - 460.
    THE Concluding Unscientific Postscript is generally regarded as the most philosophically significant of Kierkegaard's works. In terms of a subjectivistic orientation it seems to present both an elaborate critique of the pretensions of the Hegelian philosophy and an existential analysis which points to the Christian faith as the only solution to the "human predicament." Furthermore, on the basis of such a straightforward reading of the text, Kierkegaard has been both vilified as an irrationalist and praised as a profound existential thinker (...)
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  • On Kant's Response to Hume: The Second Analogy as Transcendental Argument.Robert Stern - 1999 - In Transcendental Arguments: Problems and Prospects. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press UK.
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  • All or Nothing. Systematicity, Transcendental Arguments, and Scepticism in German Idealism.Paul W. Franks - 2006 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 68 (3):616-619.
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