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Book

An Analysis of Immanuel Kant’s

Book

An Analysis of Immanuel Kant’s

DOI link for An Analysis of Immanuel Kant’s

An Analysis of Immanuel Kant’s book

Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason

An Analysis of Immanuel Kant’s

DOI link for An Analysis of Immanuel Kant’s

An Analysis of Immanuel Kant’s book

Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason
ByIan Jackson
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2017
eBook Published 15 July 2017
Pub. Location London
Imprint Macat Library
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781912281909
Pages 104
eBook ISBN 9781912281909
Subjects Behavioral Sciences, Education, Humanities, Language & Literature, Politics & International Relations
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Jackson, I. (2017). An Analysis of Immanuel Kant’s: Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781912281909

ABSTRACT

The eighteenth-century philosopher Immanuel Kant is as daunting as he is influential: widely considered to be not only one of the most challenging thinkers of all time, but also one of the most important. His Religion Within the Boundaries of Mere Reason takes on two of his central preoccupations – the reasoning powers of the human mind, and religion – and applies the full force of his reasoning abilities to consider the relationship between them. In critical thinking, reasoning is all about constructing arguments: arguments that are persuasive, systematic, comprehensive, and well-evidenced. And any examination involves stripping reasoning back to its barest essentials and attempting to get at the nature of the world by asking what we can know about God and morality from the power of our minds alone. Beginning from the axiom that God is, by definition, unknowable, Kant reasons that it is humans who bear the responsibility of creating the Kingdom of God. This, he suggests, we can do by acting morally in the world we experience – with a morality that can be shaped by reason alone. Dense and challenging, but closely and persuasively reasoned, Kant’s case for human responsibility shows reasoning skills at their most impressive.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |6 pages

Ways in to the Text

section 1|19 pages

Influences

module 1|4 pages

The Author and the Historical Context

module 2|4 pages

Academic Context

module 3|5 pages

The Problem

module 4|5 pages

The Author’s Contribution

section 2|21 pages

Ideas

module 5|5 pages

Main Ideas

module 6|5 pages

Secondary Ideas

module 7|5 pages

Achievement

module 8|5 pages

Place in the Author’s Work

section 3|21 pages

Impact

module 9|5 pages

The First Responses

module 10|5 pages

The Evolving Debate

module 11|5 pages

Impact and Influence Today

module 12|5 pages

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