Reading Kant Hermeneutically: Gadamer and the Critique of Judgment
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Kristin Gjesdal
Abstract
The relationship between 20th-century phenomenology and the transcendental program launched by Immanuel Kant is crucial, but delicate. First there is Husserl, who seemed both attracted to and seriously critical of Kant's first Critique. Then there is Heidegger's ambition to scour the entire field of the three Critiques. Most important in this context, is probably his reading of the Critique of Pure Reason in Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics (1929). Faithful to his notion of a salvaging “destruction” of the philosophical tradition, Heidegger argues that the earliest version of Kant's work, the so-called A-deduction, is radically different from the philosophy promoted by the neo-Kantians. Kant, he claims, was not really interested in epistemology in the narrow meaning of the term. He was, rather, a philosopher verging upon a genuine ontology of Being, but who, for reasons that remain unknown, felt forced to leave these tracks behind in order to pursue the transcendental conditions of knowledge. Then there is the second Critique, which Heidegger approaches through a discussion of the Kantian notions of freedom and causality. And, finally, there are his remarks about the Critique of Judgment, scattered all over his writing on art from the early 1930s onwards. However, Heidegger never produces a proper, systematic account of the relevance of the third Critique. Such an account, I argue in this essay, is provided by Hans-Georg Gadamer.
© Walter de Gruyter
Articles in the same Issue
- The Transcendental Ideality of Space and the Neglected Alternative
- Kant über Freiheit in spekulativer und in praktischer Hinsicht
- Orientierung durch Universalisierung: Der Kategorische Imperativ als Test für die Moralität von Maximen
- How Compatibilists Can Account for the Moral Motive: Autonomy and Metaphysical Internalism
- Reading Kant Hermeneutically: Gadamer and the Critique of Judgment
- Nichts Neues unter der Sonne: Bewußtsein und Selbstbewußtsein bei Paul Natorp
- „Noch“, nicht „nach“; vielleicht „noch nach“
- Der Wahrheitsbegriff in Kants Philosophie und in der gegenwärtigen Epistemologie – Bericht über die Kant-Konferenz zu Kyjiw
- Literaturhinweis
Articles in the same Issue
- The Transcendental Ideality of Space and the Neglected Alternative
- Kant über Freiheit in spekulativer und in praktischer Hinsicht
- Orientierung durch Universalisierung: Der Kategorische Imperativ als Test für die Moralität von Maximen
- How Compatibilists Can Account for the Moral Motive: Autonomy and Metaphysical Internalism
- Reading Kant Hermeneutically: Gadamer and the Critique of Judgment
- Nichts Neues unter der Sonne: Bewußtsein und Selbstbewußtsein bei Paul Natorp
- „Noch“, nicht „nach“; vielleicht „noch nach“
- Der Wahrheitsbegriff in Kants Philosophie und in der gegenwärtigen Epistemologie – Bericht über die Kant-Konferenz zu Kyjiw
- Literaturhinweis