Includes bibliographical references (pages 335-341) and index
Part I. Kant on mind. Kant and the soul as simple substance, pre-Critique -- Kant's immediatism, pre-Critique -- Transcendental idealism and immediatism, pre-Critique -- Kant's pre-Critique rejection of rational psychologists' views on substance : background on the first analogy, the amphiboly, and the first paralogism -- Kant's substantial soul : the paralogisms and beyond -- Part II. Kant on action and ethics. Kant's map of the mind -- Sedgwick, good freedom, and the Wille/Willkür distinction before, in, and after the Groundwork -- Korsgaard's intellectualized first-person account of Kant's practical agent -- Kant's moral realism and Korsgaard's constructivism
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Julian Wuerth offers a radically new interpretation of major themes in Kant's philosophy. He explores Kant's ontology of the mind, his transcendental idealism, his account of the mind's powers, and his theory of action, and goes on to develop an original, moral realist account of Kant's ethics