Kant on the Human Animal: Anthropology, Ethics, Race
English
By (author): David Baumeister
Kant on the Human Animal gives an account of Kants understanding of the human animal through examination of a range of published works and lecture transcripts from the 1770s through the 1790s, with particular attention paid to texts concerning anthropology, ethics, and human nature. It is argued that too exclusive a focus on Kants view of the moral differences between humans and other animals neglects the substantial role played by animality in Kants conception of the human being. Though the possession of reason grants humans access to a practical realm unavailable to other animals, thus establishing a basic tension between humanity and animality, such unique access does not and cannot negate the humans status as an animal being. Indeed, as analysis of Kants anthropology and theory of human nature shows, human animality provides the necessary physiological basis for humanitys development in the world, whether individually or historically. To become properly human must therefore be seen, as Kant himself does, as the achievement of one particular animalthe rational animal that is the human being.
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