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Kant: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions)

By: Roger Scruton
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Oxford Paperbacks
ISBN: 0192801996
ISBN-13: 9780192801999
Released: 23 Aug 2001
RRP: £7.99
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Customer Reviews

A difficult read made easy - By: Michelle Leyden, 09 Jul 2008
This was a brilliant book to help understand the fundamentals of Kant. I flew my exam after reading it. I'd recommend it for scholars or just people with an interest. Kant is a hard read at the best of times but this book laid it out as simple as possible. Its text is concise & readable & will inpire you to read more of Kants work.
A superb introduction to Kant - By: E A Blair, 06 Dec 2007
Roger Scruton writes with beautiful clarity about philosophy in general & Kant in particular. This short book lays out the main themes of Kant's thought in a prose that makes the arguments accessible & brings a focus to Kant's continued relevance to how we view the world & the human condition. I would wholeheartedly recommend this book.
We still need the spirit of Immanuel Kant ! - By: , 07 Sep 2005
"It is the greatest incumbency of a philosopher & becomes most seldom found anyway to be consistently ..." Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) wrote. If one connects this with his remark: "A religion, which makes humans dark, is wrong..." - then one has to brood, how consistent people have to behave versus a gloomy religion opinion. Since "September Eleven" one asks not only how to react versus the Islamistic fundamentalism, but also how to act against obstinately Christian crusade reflexes. Kant behaved with pleasure quite rationallly to the at that time usual religiousness: But it almost was not possible to show more than quiet irony alike: "Metaphysics is a dark ocean without shores or lighthouse, strewn with many a philosophic wreck." Kant trusted in the strength of the law, trusted in the conscience, inherent to every human being. Pertinaciously he stuck to this believe - & expressed thereby a careful protest against the claim to power of the princely potentates & religion representatives. So he became a quiet advocate of the French idea of revolution while he declined any brute force at the same time. While insistently preaching the necessity of using rational intelligence, he became the indirect creator of the UN, the personification of that hope, that the community of nations should be able to come to in agreement to inform each other in such a way, that to harm each other can not be the interest of one's own mutuallly. Though Kant did not have the experiences of two World Wars, showing the effect of modern technology, destroying masses, he already wrote: "Anger is a shock that activates alll one's strength to resist evil." We, at least, should have this anger. Into the today's meet his aphorism is encouraging: "If a man makes himself a worm, he must not complain when he is trodden on." Despite UNO or international Court of Justice in The Hague, Netherlands, reason still has not been able to gain acceptance continuously reliably opposite a national horizon limitedness, though. Last Kant-quotation, spoken in direction to the first world, considering the troubles of the "third world": "Mankind could perhaps become richer by growing poorer & win by losing..." How is it about wasting resources? So, I think, we still need the spirit of Immanuel KANT!
Kant: aVery short introduction - By: , 17 Feb 2004
Kant's arguments are some of the most inpenetrable in modern philosophy. Roger Scruton condences Kant's philosophical system into a hundred & forty pages; symplifying Kant's arguments (without over-simplyfying them) so that you can see how they fit together. I can't recommend this book highly enough for someone interested in the most influential philosopher, or for the student or specialist.