Difficult Freedom and Radical Evil in Kant

Deceiving Reason

Professor Joel Madore author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:25th Apr '13

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Difficult Freedom and Radical Evil in Kant cover

A refreshing existential insight into Immanuel Kant's notion of radical evil.

To speak of evil is to speak of a gap between what is and what should be. If classical approaches to this problem often relied on a religious or metaphysical framework to structure their response, Kant's answer is typically modern in that it places within the subject the means of its own moral regeneration. And yet from his first essays on ethics to later, more rigorous writings on the issue, Kant also admits an undeniable fallibility and inherent weakness to humanity. This book explores this neglected existential side of Kant's work. It presents radical evil as vacillating between tragic and freedom, at the threshold of humanity. Through it's careful exegesis of the Kantian corpus, in gauging contemporary responses from both philosophical traditions, and by drawing from concrete examples of evil, the book offers a novel and accessible account of what is widely considered to be an intricate yet urgent problem of philosophy.

Generally, I greatly enjoyed reading this monograph as it is original, thought-provoking, well-informed, well-structured and creatively written. Joel Madore's account of Kant's tense togetherness of a morality based upon absolute freedom conjoined with a radical notion of evil is refreshing and fascinating. It explores a much neglected 'existentialist' side to Kant, which is nefariously pessimistic in nature. -- Philosophischer Literaturanzeiger, Vol. 64, no. 4

ISBN: 9781472513076

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 286g

208 pages