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About this product
Product Identifiers
PublisherCambridge University Press
ISBN-101009239252
ISBN-139781009239257
eBay Product ID (ePID)22058629530
Product Key Features
Book TitleHeidegger's Interpretation of Kant : the Violence and the Charity
Number of Pages240 Pages
LanguageEnglish
TopicHistory & Surveys / Modern
Publication Year2023
IllustratorYes
GenrePhilosophy
AuthorMorganna Lambeth
FormatHardcover
Dimensions
Item Height0.7 in
Item Length9.3 in
Item Width6.2 in
Additional Product Features
LCCN2022-062024
Dewey Edition23
Reviews'With exemplary clarity and command, Morganna Lambeth's reconstructive interpretation of Heidegger's early studies of Kant makes a persuasive case for underappreciated lines of real convergence between the two thinkers (not least on the subject of time). By showing how Heidegger elaborates the most promising of inconsistent strands of Kant's argument, she demonstrates the depths of Heidegger's self-acknowledged philosophical indebtedness to Kant.' Daniel O. Dahlstrom, Boston University
Dewey Decimal193
Table Of ContentIntroduction; 1. The Two-Strand Method of Interpreting Kant; 2. The Receptivity and Spontaneity of Cognition; 3. A Common Root: Heidegger's Foundationalism; 4. The Metaphysical Deduction and Schematism; 5. The Transcendental Deduction; 6. The Form of Time and Self-Affection; Conclusion.
SynopsisHeidegger has a reputation for reading himself into the philosophers he interprets, and his interpretation of Kant has therefore had little uptake in anglophone Kant scholarship. This book provides a new and compelling account of Heidegger's method of interpreting Kant, arguing that it is more promising than is typically recognized., Heidegger has a reputation for reading himself into the philosophers he interprets, and his interpretation of Kant has therefore had little uptake in anglophone Kant scholarship. In this book, Morganna Lambeth provides a new account of Heidegger's method of interpreting Kant, arguing that it is more promising than is typically recognized. On her account, Heidegger thinks that Kant's greatest insights are located in moments of tension, where Kant struggles to articulate something new about his subject-matter. The role of the interpreter, then, is to disentangle competing strands of argument, and to determine which strand is most compelling. Lambeth traces Heidegger's interpretive method across his reading of Kant's Critique of Pure Reason and situates Heidegger's reconstruction of Kant's best line of argument against other post-Kantian readings. She finally shows how Heidegger's deep engagement with Kant sheds light on Heidegger's own philosophical views.