Themes in Kant's Metaphysics and Ethics


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By Arthur Melnick
Imprint:
THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
228 x 152 mm
Weight:
400 g
Pages:
276

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Description

Arthur Melnick is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Illinois, Urbana. A specialist in the philosophy of Kant, Melnick is the author of Kant's Analogies of Experience, Space, Time and Thought in Kant, and Representation of the World: A Naturalized Semantics. He has also published numerous articles and book reviews.

The essays are meticulous in style and address contested areas of Kantian interpretation. . . . This collection will stimulate much debate among those engaged in various aspects of Kantian studies.""-Gerard Mannion, Theological Studies ""Melnick tackles a number of the central problems in Kant interpretation with exceptional clarity. He proposes a coherent and innovative approach that should be widely discussed.""-Paul Guyer, University of Pennsylvania ""Ranging from close Kant interpretation, to extensions and modifications of Kant's thought, to more independent philosophical investigations-albeit in the Kantian spirit-the essays contained in this volume are uniformly written in remarkably crisp and solid prose. Throughout the collection Melnick demonstrates a thorough understanding of Kant's predecessors and contemporaries, a command of the current state of Kant scholarship, and a critical awareness of the work done by contemporary Anglo-American philosophers on the issues addressed in Kant's philosophy."" - Lee Hardy, Review of Metaphysics

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