"Kant had thoughts on language, but his account of language is not explicit and cannot be found in any dedicated section of his works, so it needs to be philosophically reconstructed. The essays in this volume address the linguistic ramifications of Kant's thought and investigate his views on language from unique perspectives. They demonstrate that Kant's notions of thinking, knowing, communicating, and acting have linguistic implications: from the problem of empirical concept-formation to the categorialstructure of experience, from the exhibition of aesthetic ideas to the role of analogies and metaphors, from poetry as the art of language to the moral relevance of rhetoric and the problem of persuasion, and from the source of Kant's philosophical vocabulary to the role of language in defining 'humanity'. The volume offers a new and distinctive interpretive context in which Kant's approach to language can be critically appreciated"-- Provided by publisher.
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Addresses the linguistic ramifications of Kant's thought and investigates his views on language from unique perspectives.
Introduction Konstantin Pollok and Luigi Filieri; Part I. Linguistic
Implications of Kant's Thought:
1. Kant on language: semiotics and heuristics
Mirella Capozzi;
2. The rise of empirical meaning Claudio La Rocca;
3. Kant
and the idea of a language in 'the senses' Clinton Tolley;
4. Grammar,
categories and the structure of experience Peter Thielke;
5. A liberated
language. Kant on hypotyposis, symbol and analogy Alfredo Ferrarin;
6.
Expressing the unnamable: poetic language, humanity and sociability in Kant's
third critique Iris Vidmar Jovanovi;
7. Kant's metaphors and analogies Sofie
C. Mųller; Part II. Kant on Language: Historical and Philosophical
Implications:
8. Kant's vocabulary in context: 18th century canons for
building a philosophical language Courtney D. Fugate;
9. Cassirer on Kant and
W. v. Humboldt on language: 'Die Freiheit und Selbständigkeit des geistigen
Tuns' Sebastian Luft;
10. Anthropology and the deaf and dumb: investigating
Kant's sources Raphael Ehrsam;
11. Not those who 'all speak with pictures':
Kant on linguistic abilities and human progress Huaping Lu-Adler;
12. Like
entering a bright room? Kant and the challenge of lucidity Adam Westra;
13.
Kant and the moral challenges of rhetoric Scott R. Stroud;
14. Kant's
inferentialism Michael N. Forster;
15. Was Kant an expressivist?Should he
have been? Karl Schafer; Bibliography; Index.
Luigi Filieri is DAAD-PRIME Post-Doctoral Fellow at the Kant-Forschungsstelle, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz. He is the co-editor of both The Method of Culture: Ernst Cassirer's Philosophy of Symbolic Forms (with A. Pollok, 2021) and Kant on Freedom and Human Nature (with S. C. Mųller, 2024). Konstantin Pollok is Professor of Philosophy at Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz. He is the author of Kant's Theory of Normativity: Exploring the Space of Reason (Cambridge, 2017), Kants Metaphysische Anfangsgründe der Naturwissenschaft: Ein Kritischer Kommentar (2001), and Begründen und Rechtfertigen: Eine Untersuchung zum Verhältnis zwischen rationalen Erfordernissen und prävalenten Handlungsgründen (2009).