Kant and the Possibility of Progress: From Modern Hopes to Postmodern Anxieties ed. by Paul T. Wilford and Samuel A. Stoner (review)

IF 0.7 1区 哲学 0 PHILOSOPHY
Benedikt Brunner
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This volume, edited by Paul Wilford and Samuel Stoner, not only analyzes the historical foundations of Kant's idea of progress but also explores contemporary reflections on such questions as the following: Do we still believe in the possibility of progress? And if not, why has this ability been lost? What about liberal democracy, which is contested from many sides?</p> <p>In addition to a lucid introduction, which clarifies the concepts of modernity and postmodernity, the volume assembles thirteen chapters. While the first seven chapters deal with the idea of progress in Kant, the remaining six contributions shed light on the history of that idea after Kant. Within the framework of this review, only selected articles can be discussed. In chapter 1, Oliver Sensen examines the idea of moral progress in the individual. In chapter 2, Kate Moran asks the fundamental question: should we believe in moral progress? According to Kant, the human being possesses \"a duty to avoid despondency\" (46). Following Kant, she encourages us not to go down the road of misanthropy as a consequence of one's own or others' moral failure, but \"to be generous in our assessments of others\" (46). In chapter 3, Jens Timmermann takes up this aspect again and illustrates clearly how complex Kant's concept of moral progress is. Moreover, he highlights that moral progress has a double meaning for Kant: \"first in a fundamental change of priorities—privileging morality over self-interest—and then in an ever-closer approximation to a perfectionist ideal of virtue\" (61). Like some of the other contributors to this volume, however, Timmermann remains rather vague regarding possible avenues for further research. Two other contributions deal specifically with Kant's relationship to religion. In chapter 5, Naomi Fisher asks how God, teleology, and progress are connected in the third <em>Critique</em>. She argues that in the 1790s, Kant made concrete new efforts to integrate different strands of his philosophy \"and to develop a more unified view of the human being as free and natural\" (93). Chapter 6 is a joint contribution by the two editors of this volume entitled \"Realizing the Ethical Community.\" Their focus is on Kant's religious writings and their role in the context of a \"Reformation of Culture.\" They notice—an observation as important as it is exciting—that Kant tempered his ambitious goal regarding the moral betterment of human beings with his ideas about radical evil. At the same time, Kant insisted that people must become aware of their duty to improve themselves.</p> <p>In the second section, Kant is brought into conversation with his contemporaries and some of his successors. In chapter 8, Karl Ameriks provides an overview of the relationship between history, progress, and autonomy in Kant, Herder, and beyond. In chapter 9, Richard L. Velkley analyzes the significance of language, embodiment, and the supersensual in Fichte. In chapter 10, Mark Alznauer examines the concept of philosophical history in Hegel.</p> <p>The volume concludes with three different but equally stimulating contributions. In chapter 11, Ryan S. Kemp argues that Kierkegaard \"relocated\" the concept of the Highest Good: \"Unlike Kant, who regards happiness as realizable (if at all) only in an afterlife, Kierkegaard seems to think that the person who truly embraces the self-denial of Christian love, can, even now, receive the world in joy\" (200). In this approach, Kierkegaard was clearly different from his predecessors in the German idealistic tradition. In chapter 12, entitled \"Kant and Benjamin on Hope, History, and the Task of Interpretation,\" C. Allen <strong>[End Page 159]</strong> Speight shows that Walter Benjamin stands in Kant's tradition while also diverging from him in some important respects. From Kant's universalizing assumptions, especially in relation to progress, Benjamin moved \"toward a distinctive, messianically influenced sense of time where interruption and immanent...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":46448,"journal":{"name":"JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.7000,"publicationDate":"2024-01-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/hph.2024.a916720","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"哲学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"PHILOSOPHY","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Kant and the Possibility of Progress: From Modern Hopes to Postmodern Anxieties ed. by Paul T. Wilford and Samuel A. Stoner
  • Benedikt Brunner
Paul T. Wilford and Samuel A. Stoner, editors. Kant and the Possibility of Progress: From Modern Hopes to Postmodern Anxieties. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2021. Pp. 328. Hardback, $65.00.

Our present does not invite, let alone suggest, particularly optimistic expectations for the future. This volume, edited by Paul Wilford and Samuel Stoner, not only analyzes the historical foundations of Kant's idea of progress but also explores contemporary reflections on such questions as the following: Do we still believe in the possibility of progress? And if not, why has this ability been lost? What about liberal democracy, which is contested from many sides?

In addition to a lucid introduction, which clarifies the concepts of modernity and postmodernity, the volume assembles thirteen chapters. While the first seven chapters deal with the idea of progress in Kant, the remaining six contributions shed light on the history of that idea after Kant. Within the framework of this review, only selected articles can be discussed. In chapter 1, Oliver Sensen examines the idea of moral progress in the individual. In chapter 2, Kate Moran asks the fundamental question: should we believe in moral progress? According to Kant, the human being possesses "a duty to avoid despondency" (46). Following Kant, she encourages us not to go down the road of misanthropy as a consequence of one's own or others' moral failure, but "to be generous in our assessments of others" (46). In chapter 3, Jens Timmermann takes up this aspect again and illustrates clearly how complex Kant's concept of moral progress is. Moreover, he highlights that moral progress has a double meaning for Kant: "first in a fundamental change of priorities—privileging morality over self-interest—and then in an ever-closer approximation to a perfectionist ideal of virtue" (61). Like some of the other contributors to this volume, however, Timmermann remains rather vague regarding possible avenues for further research. Two other contributions deal specifically with Kant's relationship to religion. In chapter 5, Naomi Fisher asks how God, teleology, and progress are connected in the third Critique. She argues that in the 1790s, Kant made concrete new efforts to integrate different strands of his philosophy "and to develop a more unified view of the human being as free and natural" (93). Chapter 6 is a joint contribution by the two editors of this volume entitled "Realizing the Ethical Community." Their focus is on Kant's religious writings and their role in the context of a "Reformation of Culture." They notice—an observation as important as it is exciting—that Kant tempered his ambitious goal regarding the moral betterment of human beings with his ideas about radical evil. At the same time, Kant insisted that people must become aware of their duty to improve themselves.

In the second section, Kant is brought into conversation with his contemporaries and some of his successors. In chapter 8, Karl Ameriks provides an overview of the relationship between history, progress, and autonomy in Kant, Herder, and beyond. In chapter 9, Richard L. Velkley analyzes the significance of language, embodiment, and the supersensual in Fichte. In chapter 10, Mark Alznauer examines the concept of philosophical history in Hegel.

The volume concludes with three different but equally stimulating contributions. In chapter 11, Ryan S. Kemp argues that Kierkegaard "relocated" the concept of the Highest Good: "Unlike Kant, who regards happiness as realizable (if at all) only in an afterlife, Kierkegaard seems to think that the person who truly embraces the self-denial of Christian love, can, even now, receive the world in joy" (200). In this approach, Kierkegaard was clearly different from his predecessors in the German idealistic tradition. In chapter 12, entitled "Kant and Benjamin on Hope, History, and the Task of Interpretation," C. Allen [End Page 159] Speight shows that Walter Benjamin stands in Kant's tradition while also diverging from him in some important respects. From Kant's universalizing assumptions, especially in relation to progress, Benjamin moved "toward a distinctive, messianically influenced sense of time where interruption and immanent...

康德与进步的可能性:Paul T. Wilford 和 Samuel A. Stoner 编著的《从现代希望到后现代焦虑》(评论)
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 康德与进步的可能性:由 Paul T. Wilford 和 Samuel A. Stoner 编著 Benedikt Brunner Paul T. Wilford 和 Samuel A. Stoner 编辑。康德与进步的可能性:从现代希望到后现代焦虑》。费城:费城:宾夕法尼亚大学出版社,2021 年。Pp.328.精装,65.00 美元。我们的当下并不令人对未来抱有特别乐观的期望,更不用说这样的期望了。这本由保罗-威尔福德和塞缪尔-斯托纳编辑的书不仅分析了康德进步思想的历史基础,还探讨了当代对以下问题的思考:我们还相信进步的可能性吗?如果不相信,为什么丧失了这种能力?受到多方质疑的自由民主又是怎么回事?除了清晰明了的导言(阐明了现代性和后现代性的概念)之外,该书还包括 13 个章节。前七章论述了康德的进步思想,其余六章则阐述了康德之后这一思想的历史。在本评论的框架内,只能对部分文章进行讨论。在第一章中,奥利弗-森森探讨了个人道德进步的思想。在第二章中,凯特-莫兰提出了一个基本问题:我们是否应该相信道德进步?康德认为,人 "有责任避免绝望"(46)。继康德之后,她鼓励我们不要因为自己或他人的道德失败而走上厌世之路,而是 "在评价他人时要慷慨大方"(46)。在第 3 章中,延斯-蒂默曼(Jens Timmermann)再次论述了这一问题,并清楚地说明了康德的道德进步概念是多么复杂。此外,他还强调道德进步对康德具有双重含义:"首先是优先顺序的根本改变--道德优先于自身利益,然后是越来越接近完美主义的美德理想"(61)。然而,与本卷的其他一些撰稿人一样,蒂默曼对进一步研究的可能途径仍然含糊其辞。还有两篇文章专门论述了康德与宗教的关系。在第 5 章中,娜奥米-费舍尔(Naomi Fisher)提出了上帝、目的论和进步在《第三批判》中是如何联系在一起的问题。她认为,在 1790 年代,康德做出了新的具体努力,以整合其哲学的不同分支,"并发展出一种更加统一的关于人的自由和自然的观点"(93)。第 6 章是本卷两位编辑共同撰写的,题为 "实现伦理共同体"。他们的重点是康德的宗教著作及其在 "文化改革 "背景下的作用。他们注意到--这一观察既重要又令人兴奋--康德用他关于极端邪恶的思想来缓和他关于人类道德进步的宏伟目标。与此同时,康德坚持认为,人们必须意识到他们有责任改善自己。在第二部分中,康德与他同时代的一些继承者进行了对话。在第 8 章中,卡尔-阿梅里克(Karl Ameriks)概述了康德、赫尔德及其他学者笔下的历史、进步与自主之间的关系。在第 9 章中,理查德-L-维尔克利(Richard L. Velkley)分析了费希特的语言、体现和超感性的意义。在第 10 章中,马克-阿尔兹瑙尔研究了黑格尔的哲学史概念。本卷最后收录了三篇不同但同样令人振奋的文章。在第 11 章中,Ryan S. Kemp 认为克尔凯郭尔 "重新定位 "了 "至善 "的概念:"康德认为幸福只有在来世才能实现(如果能实现的话),而克尔凯郭尔则不同,他似乎认为真正接受基督之爱的自我否定的人,即使现在也能在喜悦中接受世界"(200)。在这种方法上,克尔凯郭尔明显有别于德国唯心主义传统中的前辈。在题为 "康德与本雅明关于希望、历史和解释的任务 "的第 12 章中,C. Allen [尾页 159] Speight 指出,沃尔特-本雅明继承了康德的传统,同时也在一些重要方面与康德不同。本雅明摆脱了康德的普遍化假设,尤其是与进步有关的假设,"转向了一种独特的、受弥赛亚影响的时间感,在这种时间感中,中断和内在......
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