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Kant’s Philosophical Context: Mendelssohn, Lessing, and the Enlightenment

For Kant, Mendelssohn’s philosophy represents the “final legacy” of dogmatic metaphysics and simultaneously its “most perfect accomplishment” (AA 10: 428–9): Thus, Mendelssohn embodies the culmination of a school condemned to obsolescence. Such assessments by Kant about preceding authors were pivotal in shaping the narratives that became dominant in the history of modern philosophy. Recently, notable efforts have been made to expand, rethink, and rewrite the understanding of this history beyond the canonical accounts focused on what Kant termed the “Copernican revolution in philosophy.” This dossier aims to contribute to these historiographical lines by offering articles on Mendelssohn and Lessing, two of the most influential figures of the Enlightenment that, being seen as figures of the “dogmatic era,” were overshadowed by Kant.

Con-Textos Kantianos – Dossier 2025 “Kant on Sentiments: Between Morality and Aesthetics” Editors: Faustino Fabbianelli and Antonino Falduto

The concept of “sentiment” plays a fundamental role in the context of Kant’s philosophy, notwithstanding the clear centrality of reason in the transcendental enterprise. The dossier of the Journal Con-Textos Kantianos dedicated to the topic Kant on Sentiments: Between Morality and Aesthetics aims to make a genuine new contribution to the debate surrounding the renaissance of Kant studies in the last few decades dedicated to the “other” Kant, i.e. the one focusing on sensibility and sentiments

Current Issue

Cubierta Con-textos kantianos 20 (2024)
No. 20 (2024)
Published: 2024-11-20

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