Cultivating Personhood: Kant and Asian Philosophy / / Stephen R. Palmquist.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter Asian Studies Backlist (2000-2014) eBook Package
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Berlin ;, Boston : : De Gruyter, , [2010]
©2011
Year of Publication:2010
Language:English
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (862 p.)
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Table of Contents:
  • Frontmatter
  • Contents
  • Introductory Essays
  • Editor's Introduction
  • Keynote Essay to Book One
  • Keynote Essay to Book Two
  • Keynote Essay to Book Three
  • Book One: Critical Groundwork for Cultivating Personhood
  • 1. Self-Cognition in Transcendental Philosophy
  • 2. A Neglected Proposition of Identity
  • 3. Kant and the Reality of Time
  • 4. The Active Role of the Self in Kant's First Analogy
  • 5. Kant's Attack on Leibniz's and Locke's Amphibolies
  • 6. The First Paralogism, its Origin, and its Evolution: Kant on How the Soul Both Is and Is Not a Substance
  • 7. Kants Logik des Menschen - Duplizität der Subjektivität
  • 8. Antinomy of Identity
  • 9. Kant's Critical Concept of a Person: The Noumenal Sphere Grounding the Principle of Spirituality
  • 10. Truth, Falsehood and Dialectical Illusion: Kant's Imagination
  • 11. Persons as Causes in Kant
  • 12. The Cognitive Dimension of Freedom as Autonomy
  • 13. Respect for Persons as the Unifying Moral Ideal
  • 14. Kant and Virtuous Action: A Case of Humanity
  • 15. Freedom and Value in Kant's Practical Philosophy
  • 16. Moral Individuality and Moral Subjectivity in Leibniz, Crusius, and Kant
  • 17. Aesthetic Judgment and the Unity of Reason
  • 18. Thinking with Instruments: The Example of Kant's Compass
  • 19. Common Sense and Community in Kant's Theory of Taste
  • 20. Aesthetics and Morality in Kant and Confucius: A Second Step
  • 21. China, Nature, and the Sublime in Kant
  • Book Two: Cultivating Personhood in Politics, Ethics, and Religion
  • 22. Is There a Kantian Perspective on Human Embryonic Stem Cells?
  • 23. When Is a Person a Person - When Does the "Person" Begin?
  • 24. Personhood and Assisted Death
  • 25. Human Dignity and the Innate Right to Freedom in National and International Law
  • 26. "Irgend ein Vertrauen ... muss ... übrig bleiben": The Idea of Trust in Kant's Moral and Political Philosophy
  • 27. Autocracy: Kant on the Psycho-Politics of Self-Rule
  • 28. Die Person als gesetzgebendes Wesen
  • 29. Kant's Realm of Ends: A Communal Moral Practice as Locus for the Unity of Moral Personhood
  • 30. Kant's Notion of Perfectibility: A Condition of World-Citizenship
  • 31. Person and Character in Kant's Anthropology from a Pragmatic Point of View
  • 32. Kant and the Possibility of the Religious Citizen
  • 33. Autonomy and the Unity of the Person
  • 34. Religious Fictionalism in Kant's Ethics of Autonomy
  • 35. Respect for Persons as Respect for the Moral Law: Nicolai Hartmann's Reinterpretation of Kant
  • 36. The Unity of Human Personhood and the Problem of Evil
  • 37. How To Be a Good Person Who Does Bad Things
  • 38. Kant's Idea of Autonomy as the Basis for Schelling's Theology of Freedom
  • 39. Moral Theology or Theological Morality?
  • 40. Self-Knowledge and God in the Philosophy of Kant and Wittgenstein
  • 41. Kant's Philosophy of Religion as the Basis for Albert Schweitzer's Humanitarian Awareness
  • 42. Kant's Religious Perspective on the Human Person
  • Book Three: East-West Perspectives on Cultivating Personhood
  • 43. Mou Zongsan's Critique of Kant's Theory of Self-Consciousness in the First Critique
  • 44. Mou Zongsan and Kant on Intellectual Intuition: A Reconciliation
  • 45. On Kant's Duality of Human Beings
  • 46. Mou Zongsan's Interpretation of the Kantian Summum Bonum in Relation to Perfect Teaching (Yuanjiao)
  • 47. Confucianism and Things-in-themselves (Noumena): Reviewing the Interpretations by Mou Zongsan and Cheng Chung-ying
  • 48. The Kantian Good Will and the Confucian Sincere Will: The Centrality of Cheng ("Sincerity") in Chinese Thought
  • 49. Desire and the Project of Moral Cultivation: Kant and Xunzi on the Inclinations
  • 50. Kant and Daoism on Nothingness
  • 51. Competing Conceptions of the Selfin Kantian and Buddhist Moral Theories
  • 52. What Is Personhood? Kant and Huayan Buddhism
  • 53. Kant and the Buddha on Self-Knowledge
  • 54. Kant and Vasubandhu on the "Transcendent Self"
  • 55. Kant's Moral Philosophy in Relation to Indian Moral Philosophy as Depicted in Srimad-Bhagavad-Gita
  • 56. Human Personhood at the Interface between Moral Law and Cultural Values
  • 57. The Idea of Moral Autonomy in Kant's Ethics and its Rejection in Islamic Literature
  • 58. The Kantian Model: Confucianism and the Modern Divide
  • 59. Asian Hospitality in Kant's Cosmopolitan Law
  • 60. Doing Good or Right? Kant's Critique on Confucius
  • 61. The Exclusion of Asia and Africa from the History of Philosophy: Is Kant Responsible?
  • 62. Menschliche Autonomie als Aufgabe - der Autonomiebegriff in der Geschichtsphilosophie Kants
  • 63. Is Kant a Western Philosopher?
  • 64. The Unity of Architectonic Reasoningin Kant and I Ching
  • Backmatter