Buch, Englisch, 320 Seiten
ISBN: 978-1-009-23917-2
Verlag: Cambridge University Press
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction Konstantin Pollok and Luigi Filieri; Part I. Linguistic Implications of Kant's Thought: 1. Kant on language: semiotics and heuristics Mirella Capozzi; 2. The rise of empirical meaning Claudio La Rocca; 3. Kant and the idea of a language in 'the senses' Clinton Tolley; 4. Grammar, categories and the structure of experience Peter Thielke; 5. A liberated language. Kant on hypotyposis, symbol and analogy Alfredo Ferrarin; 6. Expressing the unnamable: poetic language, humanity and sociability in Kant's third critique Iris Vidmar Jovanovic; 7. Kant's metaphors and analogies Sofie C. Møller; Part II. Kant on Language: Historical and Philosophical Implications: 8. Kant's vocabulary in context: 18th century canons for building a philosophical language Courtney D. Fugate; 9. Cassirer on Kant and W. v. Humboldt on language: 'Die Freiheit und Selbständigkeit des geistigen Tuns' Sebastian Luft; 10. Anthropology and the deaf and dumb: investigating Kant's sources Raphael Ehrsam; 11. Not those who 'all speak with pictures': Kant on linguistic abilities and human progress Huaping Lu-Adler; 12. Like entering a bright room? Kant and the challenge of lucidity Adam Westra; 13. Kant and the moral challenges of rhetoric Scott R. Stroud; 14. Kant's inferentialism Michael N. Forster; 15. Was Kant an expressivist?Should he have been? Karl Schafer; Bibliography; Index.