Borderless Philosophy 4 (2021), Featuring: Works By Arran Gare, Kristina Lebedeva, and Others, on Anti-Posthumanism, Our Sociable Sociality, Les Fleurs de Bien in London, Moral Futurology, Neo-Organicist Epistemology, What It’s Like to Be in Pain, Embodied-Enactive Philosophy of Science, Anti-Computational-Theory-of-Mind, Real Metaphysics, and Ciceronian Unhappy Consciousness.

TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. Arran Gare (Swinburne University of Technology, AU), “Against Posthumanism: Posthumanism as the World Vision of House-Slaves,” 1-56. 2. Robert Hanna (Independent, USA), “Our Sociable Sociality: A Postscript to The Mind-Body Politic,” 57-96. 3. Emre Kazim (Kings College London, UK), “Les Fleurs du Bien All Over London,” 97-99. 4. Andreas Keller (Independent, … [continue reading]

Contemporary Studies in Kantian Philosophy 6 (2021), Featuring: A Bibliography of Kant’s Writings Listed by English Translations of Their Titles, Nora Schleich on The Aestheticity of the Sublime, and The Limits of Sense and Reason: A Line-By-Line Critical Commentary on Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, Part 1.

TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. CSKP Editorial Team, “A Bibliography of Kant’s Writings Listed By English Translations of Their Titles,” 1-10. 2. Robert Hanna (Independent, USA), The Limits of Sense and Reason: A Line-By-Line Critical Commentary on Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, Part 1, 11-109. 3. Nora Schleich (Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz DE), “The Aestheticity of the … [continue reading]

A Theory of Human Dignity, #10–Policy of Truth: The Murderer-at-the-Door Revisited.

This long essay, “A Theory of Human Dignity,” presents and defends a general theory of human dignity, with special attention paid to spelling out its background metaphysics, formulating and justifying a basic set of dignitarian moral principles, and critically addressing hard cases for the theory. “A Theory of Human Dignity” is being made available here … [continue reading]

THE LIMITS OF SENSE AND REASON: A Line-By-Line Critical Commentary on Kant’s “Critique of Pure Reason,” #15–Prelude to Kant’s Philosophy of Natural Science.

[I] was then making plans for a work that might perhaps have the title, “The Limits of Sense and Reason.” I planned to have it consist of two parts, a theoretical and a practical. The first part would have two sections, (1) general phenomenology and (2) metaphysics, but this only with regard to its method. … [continue reading]

A Theory of Human Dignity, #9–How to Solve the Problem of Moral Dilemmas.

This long essay, “A Theory of Human Dignity,” presents and defends a general theory of human dignity, with special attention paid to spelling out its background metaphysics, formulating and justifying a basic set of dignitarian moral principles, and critically addressing hard cases for the theory. “A Theory of Human Dignity” is being made available here … [continue reading]

A Theory of Human Dignity, #8–How to Solve the Universalizability and Rigorism Problems for Broadly Kantian Nonideal Dignitarian Moral Theory.

This long essay, “A Theory of Human Dignity,” presents and defends a general theory of human dignity, with special attention paid to spelling out its background metaphysics, formulating and justifying a basic set of dignitarian moral principles, and critically addressing hard cases for the theory. “A Theory of Human Dignity” is being made available here … [continue reading]

THE LIMITS OF SENSE AND REASON: A Line-By-Line Critical Commentary on Kant’s “Critique of Pure Reason,” #14–Prelude to Kant’s Philosophy of Mathematics.

[I] was then making plans for a work that might perhaps have the title, “The Limits of Sense and Reason.” I planned to have it consist of two parts, a theoretical and a practical. The first part would have two sections, (1) general phenomenology and (2) metaphysics, but this only with regard to its method. … [continue reading]