ABSTRACT

Scholarship on Immanuel Kant and the German Idealists often attends to the points of divergence. While differences are vital, this volume does the opposite, offering a close inspection of some of the key Kantian concepts that are embraced and retained by the Idealists. It does this by bringing together an original set of critical reflections on the role that the German Idealists ascribe to fundamental Kantian ideas and insights within their own systems. A central motivation for this volume is to resist reductive accounts of the complex relationship between German Idealism and Kant’s Idealism through a study of the inheritance of Kant’s legacy in German Idealism. As such, this volume contributes to new interpretations and rethinking of traditional accounts in light of these reflections on some of the significant components of German Idealism that can defensibly be called Kantian. The contributors to this volume are Dina Emundts, Eckart Förster, Gerad Gentry, Johannes Haag, Dean Moyar, Lydia Moland, Dalia Nassar, Karin Nisenbaum, Anne Pollok, and Nicholas Stang.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

The Legacies of Kant in German Idealism

part I|122 pages

The Emergence of a New Logical Method

chapter 2|21 pages

From Transcendental Logic to Speculative Logic

with Appendix G.W.F. Hegel: C. The Science, Translated by Martin Shuster

chapter 3|35 pages

Hegel’s Logic of Purposiveness

chapter 4|31 pages

Kant and Hegel on the Drive of Reason

From Concept to Idea through Inference

chapter 5|33 pages

‘With What Must Transcendental Philosophy Begin?’

Kant and Hegel on Nothingness and Indeterminacy

part II|73 pages

Time, Intuitive Understanding, and Practical Reason

chapter 6|24 pages

Kant and Hegel on Time

chapter 7|25 pages

Intuiting the Original Unity?

Modality and Intellectual Intuition in Hölderlin’s Urteil und Sein

chapter 8|22 pages

The Fate of Practical Reason

Kant and Schelling on Virtue, Happiness, and the Postulate of God’s Existence 1

part III|67 pages

The Organization of Matter and Aesthetic Freedom

chapter 10|22 pages

Aesthetics and the Experience of Freedom

A Kantian Legacy in Hegel’s Philosophy of Art

chapter 11|18 pages

Aesthetic Conditions of Freedom

Friedrich Schiller as a Complicated Kantian