Book contents
- The Critique of Judgment and the Unity of Kant’s Critical System
- The Critique of Judgment and the Unity of Kant’s Critical System
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Note on Sources
- Kant’s Writings by Abbreviations Used for German Titles with Corresponding Translations
- Introduction
- Part I The Highest Good and the Postulates
- Part II Aesthetic Judgment and the “Moral Image”
- Part III Teleological Judgment and the “Moral Image”
- Chapter 7 Kant’s Account of Nature’s Systematicity and the Unity of Theoretical and Practical Reason
- Chapter 8 Organisms as “Natural Ends” and Reflective Judgment’s “Image” of Externalized Freedom
- Chapter 9 Kant’s Teleological Philosophy of History
- Concluding Remarks
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 7 - Kant’s Account of Nature’s Systematicity and the Unity of Theoretical and Practical Reason
from Part III - Teleological Judgment and the “Moral Image”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 August 2023
- The Critique of Judgment and the Unity of Kant’s Critical System
- The Critique of Judgment and the Unity of Kant’s Critical System
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Note on Sources
- Kant’s Writings by Abbreviations Used for German Titles with Corresponding Translations
- Introduction
- Part I The Highest Good and the Postulates
- Part II Aesthetic Judgment and the “Moral Image”
- Part III Teleological Judgment and the “Moral Image”
- Chapter 7 Kant’s Account of Nature’s Systematicity and the Unity of Theoretical and Practical Reason
- Chapter 8 Organisms as “Natural Ends” and Reflective Judgment’s “Image” of Externalized Freedom
- Chapter 9 Kant’s Teleological Philosophy of History
- Concluding Remarks
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Although Kant’s view according to which our theoretical representation of nature “coheres” with our representation of nature from the perspective of our practical needs culminates with the third Critique and the notion of reflective judgment’s principle of nature’s purposiveness, this chapter demonstrates that the origins of this view can already be discerned in Kant’s discussion of nature’s systematicity in the first Critique, namely, in his discussion of the rationalist notion of the Transcendental Ideal and his account of nature as a unified system of laws in the Appendix to the Dialectic. While for some commentators reason’s need for the unconditioned is exclusively a reflection of its practical need, I argue that that the notion of the metaphysical ground of the unity of nature is a necessary notion for reason in both its theoretical and practical functions and, moreover, that reason’s practical ends are presupposed in every theoretical investigation of nature.
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- The Critique of Judgment and the Unity of Kant's Critical System , pp. 179 - 205Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023