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Palmquist's Commentary provides the first definitive clarification on Kant's Philosophy of Religion in English; it includes the full text of Pluhar's translation, interspersed with explanations, providing both a detailed overview and an original interpretation of Kant's work.
Auteur
Stephen R. Palmquist is Professor of Philosophy and Religion at Hong Kong Baptist University. He lectures on a wide variety of subjects in the fields of philosophy, psychology, and religious studies. Palmquist has written numerous scholarly articles on various aspects of Kant's philosophy, and has published 10 books, the most recent of which is Cultivating Personhood: Kant and Asian Philosophy (2010). In addition to Kant, his research interests include depth psychology, philosophy of love, philosophical anthropology, mysticism, logic of symbolism, theology of politics, and philosophy of religion.
Contenu
Preface x
Acknowledgments xxiii
Abbreviations xxvi
Introduction: The Hermeneutic Background to Kant's Religion: The Two Prefaces (R 3-14) 1
Kant's private beliefs and the writing of Religion 1
The 1793 Preface: (A) Religion as the final purpose of morality 7
The 1793 Preface: (B) Unifying philosophical and biblical theology 21
The 1794 Preface: Two experiments and Kant's responses to critics 31
Part I: Human Nature's Transcendental Problem: Evil and the Boundary of Goodness (First Piece) 41
1 The Original Goodness of Human Nature: Introduction, Comment, and Section I (R 19-28) 43
Untitled introduction: Is humanity good or evil by nature? 43
Comment: (A) Why moral neutrality is impossible 51
Comment: (B) Could humans be partly good and partly evil? 59
Section I: Human nature's original predisposition is good 63
2 The Propensity to Evil in Human Nature: Sections II and III (R 28-39) 72
Section II: (A) Three sources of moral evil 72
Section II: (B) Defining evil as a perversion of moral reasoning 78
Section III: (A) Empirical evil and its origin on the boundary 83
Section III: (B) The need for (and form of) an a priori proof 92
3 Evil's Rational Origin and the Hope for Recovery: Sections IV and V (R 39-52) 106
Section IV: (A) Transcendental versus empirical origins 106
Section IV: (B) Assessing the Bible's account of evil's origin 112
Section V: (A) Divine aid and conversion's possibility 120
Section V: (B) God's role in transforming moral character 133
Appendix I: Experiencing the Effects of Grace against Evil: The First General Comment (R 52-3) 144
Part II: The Individual's Logical Struggle: The Power of Belief in Divine Aid (Second Piece) 151
4 The Personified Idea of the Good Principle: Introduction and Section One, Subsections A and B (R 57-66) 153
Untitled introduction: How to distinguish evil from good 153
Section One, A: The archetype of perfection as a divine gift 161
Section One, B: (A) Becoming exemplary via practical faith 166
Section One, B: (B) An archetypal person's twofold nature 169
5 Legitimizing Hope in Divine Grace: Section One, Subsection C (R 66-78) 179
First difficulty: How can imperfect beings become holy? 179
Second difficulty: Can we be certain of our eternal destiny? 183
Third difficulty: How can God punish pre?]conversion evil? 195
Overview: Grace as the basis for a legal claim to being good 207
6 Biblical Symbols of the Struggle with Evil: Section Two (R 78-84) 215
The Genesis narrative on evil's legal claim to dominion 215
Advent of a unique person, free from the propensity to evil 218
In what sense does the crucifixion defeat the power of evil? 223
The narrative's rational meaning 227
Appendix II: Experiencing Miracles as Self?]Negating: The Second General Comment (R 84-9) 233
Part III: The Community's Empirical Victory: The Church as Historical Vehicle for Good (Third Piece) 249
7 The Founding of a True Church: Introduction and Division One, Sections I-V (R 93-109) 251
Untitled introduction: Hope for victory in struggling with evil 251
Division One, Sections I-III: Founding the ethical community 255
i. Sections I and II: The duty to leave the state of nature 255
ii. Section III: An ethical community requires God 263
i. Section IV: The four requirements for church organization 267
ii. Section V: Every true church begins as a revelation faith 273
8 Interpreting Religious Ideas in a Church: Division One, Sections VI-VII (R 109-24) 288
Division One, Section VI: (A) Interpretations must be moral 288
Division One, Section VI: (B) Nonmoral Interpretive Methods 294
i. Scriptural scholarship is secondary to the moral method 294
ii. Feeling as a common but unreliable third method 300
i. The "remarkable antinomy" of sanctifying faith 303
ii. Perspectival solution to the antinomy of faith 310
9 Gradual Victory of Good in Church History: Division Two (R 125-37) 326
Division Two: (A) The unchangeable basis of the true church 326
Division Two: (B) Christianity's radical break with Judaism 329
i. The allegedly nonuniversal emphasis of the Jewish faith 329
ii. The universal heart of Jesus' message 333
i. The diversion of historical Christianity from its true aim 338
ii. Qualified optimism about the present state of religion 341
Appendix III: Understanding Mysteries as Moral Symbols in Communities of Faith: The Third General Comment (R 137-47) 355
Part IV: Religion's Hypothetical Application: How to Serve God in a Church (Fourth Piece) 377
10 Natural Christianity Revealed: Introductions and Part One, Section One (R 151-63) 379
Untitled introduction: True and false service of God 379
Part One, Introduction: Approaches to interpreting religion 384
Part One, Section One: (A) The moral core of Jesus' teachings 395
Part One, Section One: (B) Jesus' teachings on the afterlife 404
11 Learning Statutory Religion without Delusion: Part One, Section Two, and Part Two 1-2 (R 163-75) 409
2 Part One, Section Two: (B) Christian Judaism as prudential 414
Part Two, Introduction and The origin of religious delusion 420
Part Two, The moral principle opposing religious delusion 427
12 Conscience as the Authentic Guide: Part Two, 3-4 (R 175-90) 439
Part Two, Appendix: The deception of priestery 439
Part Two, Appendix: Teaching godliness without …