Beyond Kant
Questions Without Answers
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Tim Alexander
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De :
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Boris Kriger
The novelty of the book lies in its reimagining of Kant's philosophy as a dynamic tool of inquiry rather than a fossilized dogma. The author argues that treating Kant's work as a sacred, immutable canon betrays its very essence. Kant's thought was, from the outset, critical—meant to probe the boundaries of reason and to craft methods of knowing, not to hand down definitive answers carved in philosophical stone. The book highlights the central paradox: by turning Kant's ideas into doctrine, one drains them of the very critical energy that Kant himself saw as the lifeblood of philosophy.
Another original dimension of the book is its treatment of Kant's system as historically grounded yet perpetually open to revision. The author insists that many of Kant's key notions—such as the a priori forms of sensibility or the elusive "thing-in-itself"—were indeed revolutionary in his day, but now demand reexamination in light of modern science and philosophy. Kant's philosophy is presented not as a fixed set of eternal truths, but as a launchpad for new explorations in knowledge, morality, and aesthetics.
©2025 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger