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Kant denies that Reason is intuitive, but demands that we must 'make' Reason intuitive, particularly in matters of morality. This book analyzes and explores this central paradox within Kantian thought, with contributions from a range of different perspectives, including political philosophy, ethics, religion, science and aesthetics.Introduction Practical Schematism, Teleology and the Unity of the Metaphysics of Morals ; G.Banham The Transition Problem in Kant's Opus Postumum ; H.Caygill Self-Submission and Mutual Domination: Constructions of Marriage and Gender in Kant and Fichte; G.Faraklas Concept and Intuition in Kant's Philosophy of Religion; M.Forschner The Categories of the Good as Categories of Moral Action; P.Kontos Kant: Sciences, Systems and Organisms; I.Patellis On the Logic of the Realization of Reason in Society and History; K.Psychopedis 'Fact of Reason' and 'Natural Human Reason': On Kant's Notion of Moral Experience; K.Sargentis The Problem of Philosophical Knowledge in Kant's Critique of Pure Reason : How to Make Theoretical Reason Intuitive; S.Virvidakis The Abject Root: Kant and the Problem of Representing Evil; M.Wirth Negative Presentation: The Role of the Imagination in the Mathematically and the Dynamically Sublime; G.XiropaidisGARY BANHAM Reader in Transcendental Philosophy, Manchester Metropolitan University, UKHOWARD CAYGILL Professor of Cultural History, Goldsmiths College, University of London, UKGEORGES FARAKLAS Associate Professor of Political Philosophy, Panteion University, GreeceMAXIMILIAN FORSCHNER Professor of Philosophy, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, GermanyPAVLOS KONTOS Assistant Professor of Philosophy, University of Patras, GreeceIOLI PATELLIS Professor of Modern and Contemporary Philosophy, University of Patras, GreeceKOSMAS PSYCHOPEDIS Professor in the Department of Economics, University of Athens, GreeceKONSTANTINOS SARGENTIS Lecturer in Ethics, University of Crete, GreeceSTELIOS VIRVIDAKIS Professor of Philosophy, Univelă
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