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Building: Faculty of Arts, Floor: 4, Room: FA405
Thursday 15:50 - 17:30 CEST (08/09/2016)
Recent scholarship on Kant's idea of perpetual peace examine the way we should interpret his view of a republican constitution. The interest in this topic is not purely scholarly. Through Rawls’s and Habermas’s works, Kant’s influence on contemporary political philosophy is immense and Kant’s view of political teleology and his conception of perpetual peace as the “entire final end of the doctrine of right within the limits of mere reason” are very relevant today. This panel will concentrate on Kant's ideal within the context of the republican tradition.
| Title | Details |
|---|---|
| Is Republicanism a basic presupposition of Kant's political philosophy? | View Paper Details |
| Do we have a choice between political, metaphysical and moral justification in political philosophy? | View Paper Details |
| Kant and The Problem of Politics: Conflict and Peace | View Paper Details |
| Perpetual Peace: Relationships between Kant’s thought and the Italian Political Context in the Nineteenth Century | View Paper Details |